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Syracuse Orange football

The Syracuse Orange football team represents Syracuse University in the sport of American football. The Orange compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Syracuse is the only Division I FBS school in New York to compete in one of the Power Five conferences.

Syracuse Orange football
First season1889; 134 years ago (1889)
Athletic directorJohn Wildhack
Head coachDino Babers
7th season, 36–49 (.424)
StadiumJMA Wireless Dome
(capacity: 49,250)
Year built1980
Field surfaceFieldTurf[1]
LocationSyracuse, New York
ConferenceACC (2013–present)
DivisionAtlantic (2013–present)
Past conferencesBig East
(1991–2012)
Independent
(1889–1990)
All-time record734–554–49 (.567)
Bowl record16–10–1 (.611)
Claimed national titles1 (1959)
Conference titles5 (1996, 1997, 1998, 2004, 2012)
RivalriesBoston College (rivalry)
Pittsburgh (rivalry)
West Virginia (rivalry)
Penn State (rivalry)
Colgate (rivalry)
Heisman winnersErnie Davis – 1961
Consensus All-Americans20[2]
Current uniform
ColorsOrange[3]
 
Fight songDown the Field
MascotOtto the Orange
Marching bandSyracuse University Marching Band
WebsiteCuse football

The Orange play their home games in the JMA Wireless Dome, referred to as the JMA Dome on the university's campus in Syracuse, New York.[4] The stadium is also known as "The Loud House".

Formed in 1889, the program has amassed over 700 wins and has achieved one consensus national championship in 1959, defeating the Texas Longhorns in that season's Cotton Bowl. Syracuse has had 2 undefeated seasons, 5 conference championships since 1991, and has produced a Heisman Trophy winner, over 60 first team All-Americans, 18 Academic All-Americans and over 240 NFL players.[5] Syracuse has had 18 members inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, 2nd-most in the ACC, including former players Ernie Davis, Tim Green, Don McPherson, Art Monk and former coaches Vic Hanson, Ben Schwartzwalder, and Dick MacPherson.[6] The Orange boast 8 inductees in the Pro Football Hall Of Fame, tied for the 4th-most of any school, including Jim Brown, Marvin Harrison, Larry Csonka, and Floyd Little.[7]

The Orange have 27 bowl appearances, 10 of which are among the New Year's Six Bowls. Syracuse has finished in the Final Top 25 rankings 21 times in the national polls, and finished in either the AP or Coaches Polls a combined 35 times since 1952. Syracuse has appeared in over 200 AP Polls including 7 weeks at AP number one.

History Edit

Early history (1889–1948) Edit

Syracuse played its first football game on November 23, 1889,[8][9] and achieved its first success in the 1890s and 1900s. With the construction of "state-of-the-art" Archbold Stadium in 1907, Syracuse rose to national prominence under College Football Hall of Fame coach Frank "Buck" O'Neill. The 1915 squad garnered a Rose Bowl invitation that the school declined, having already played on the West Coast that season. In 1918, John Barsha (born Abraham Barshofsky) was co‐captain of the 1918 Walter Camp All‐America football team.[10]

 
Syracuse football player with Hall of Languages behind him (c.1903).

The 1920s had continued success with teams featuring two-time All American Doc Alexander and star end Vic Hanson. Vic Hanson was an American football player and coach, basketball player, and baseball player. A three-sport college athlete, he played football, basketball, and baseball at Syracuse in the 1920s, serving as team captain in all three sports. The Watertown, New York native was named a Basketball All-American three times—in 1925, 1926, and 1927—was named the Helms Foundation College Basketball Player of the Year and was a consensus selection to both 1925 and 1926 College Football All-America Teams. Hanson is one of only two individuals who are members (Amos Alonzo Stagg being the other) of both the Basketball Hall of Fame and the College Football Hall of Fame and the only one inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame, the College Basketball Hall of Fame and the College Football Hall of Fame. He later coached the team from 1930 to 1936.

In the 1930s, Syracuse and nearby Cornell University were among the first collegiate football teams to include African-American players as starting backfield players. Wilmeth Sidat-Singh was an African-American basketball star player for DeWitt Clinton High School. He received an offer of a basketball scholarship from Syracuse University and enrolled in 1935. While playing an intramural football game, an assistant football coach noticed his talent and asked him to join the football team. Sidat-Singh starred for Syracuse, playing a position equivalent to modern-day quarterback. In that era, when games were played in Southern segregation states, African-American players from Northern schools were banned from the field. Because of his light complexion and name, Sidat-Singh was sometimes assumed to be a "Hindu" (as people from India were often called by Americans during this time). However. shortly before a game against Maryland, a black sportswriter, Sam Lacy wrote an article in the Baltimore Afro-American, revealing Sidat-Singh's true racial identity. Wilmeth Sidat-Singh was held out of the game and Syracuse lost that game 0–13. Olympic track athlete Marty Glickman, who played football for Syracuse, believed athletic director Lew Andreas was a bigot who occasionally used a disparaging term for Blacks; the 18-year-old Glickman thought Andreas should have stood up for Sidat-Singh (Glickman also faulted himself for not standing up for Sidat-Singh).[11] In a rematch the following year at Syracuse, Sidat-Singh led the Orange to a lopsided victory (53–0) over Maryland. In 2005, Syracuse University honored Wilmeth Sidat-Singh by retiring his basketball jersey number.[12] On Saturday, Nov. 9, 2013, the University of Maryland publicly apologized to surviving relatives from the Webb family at a ceremony during a football game with Syracuse University.[13]

Ossie Solem coached at Syracuse from 1937 to 1945. During his tenure at Syracuse, he tutored a young assistant coach named Bud Wilkinson, who went on to lead the Oklahoma Sooners to win three national championships.

Ben Schwartzwalder era (1949–1973) Edit

 
Ben Schwartzwalder and QB Dick Easterly, December 5, 1959 at UCLA.

The late 1930s and 1940s had a decline in fortunes that began to reverse when Ben Schwartzwalder took over as head coach in 1949.[14] Syracuse made its first bowl appearance in the 1953 Orange Bowl,[15] followed by appearances in the 1957 Cotton Bowl[16] and the 1959 Orange Bowl.[17] Jim Brown (a high school standout from Manhasset, New York),[18][19] considered to be one of the greatest running backs of all time, as well as one of the greatest players in NFL history,[20] was a consensus first-team All-American in 1956, finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting and set school records for highest season rush average (6.2) and most rushing touchdowns in a single game (6). In the Cotton Bowl, he rushed for 132 yards, scored three touchdowns, and kicked three extra points, but a blocked extra point after Syracuse's third touchdown was the difference as TCU won 28–27.[21]

In 1959, Syracuse earned its first consensus national championship (finishing No. 1 in both the AP and Coaches' Polls) following an undefeated season (11–0) and Cotton Bowl Classic victory over Texas. The team featured sophomore running back Ernie Davis (of Elmira, New York), who went on to become the first African American to win the Heisman Trophy in 1961,[22] and All-American tackle Ron Luciano, who eventually become a prominent Major League Baseball umpire. Davis was slated to play for the Cleveland Browns in the same backfield as Jim Brown, but died of leukemia before being able to play professionally. Syracuse remained competitive through the 1960s with a series of All-American running backs, including Floyd Little and Larry Csonka (both inductees in the Pro Football Hall of Fame).[23][24]

Schwartzwalder produced 22 straight years of non-losing football, took the Orange to seven bowls, won the Lambert-Meadowlands Trophy (to recognize the Eastern champion in Division I FBS) four times: 1952, 1956, 1959, 1966; and won the national championship in 1959. He developed some of the most impressive running backs the game has ever seen - Jim Brown, Ernie Davis, Jim Nance, Floyd Little and Larry Csonka. Orange teams outrushed opponents by more than 22,000 yards under Schwartzwalder. He retired as Syracuse's head coach after the 1973 season, which was Syracuse's third consecutive losing season.[25] Schwartzwalder left Syracuse with a 153–91–3 record.[26]

In 1969, a group of nine African American student-athletes boycotted Syracuse University's football program to demand change and promote racial equality. Popularized erroneously in 1970 by the media as the “Syracuse 8,” the nine students behind the boycott were Gregory Allen, Richard Bulls, Dana Harrell, John Godbolt, John Lobon, Clarence “Bucky” McGill, A. Alif Muhammad (then known as Al Newton), Duane Walker, and Ron Womack.[27] The student athletes drafted a list of four demands, three of which were advocating for the betterment for all student athletes at the university, were access to the same academic tutoring as their white teammates; better medical care for all team members; starting assignments based on merit; and racially integrating the coaching staff, which had been all white since 1898.[28]

Frank Maloney era (1974–1980) Edit

Michigan assistant coach Frank Maloney was hired as Schwartzwalder's replacement.[29] Maloney's tenure at Syracuse was marked by inconsistency.[30] The fan base turned on him as the Orange failed to achieve the national status they had enjoyed under Schwartzwalder. Maloney's program was also limited by archaic facilities.[31] Archbold Stadium, Syracuse's home field since 1907, was in need of replacement.[31] Nonetheless, Maloney did recruit a number of future NFL stars such as Joe Morris and Pro Football Hall of Fame member Art Monk.[32]

Maloney was the subject of criticism, not only from the fans and alumni, but also from the 1959 national championship team, members of which started a campaign calling for his ouster.[33] Ironically enough, this call from program alumni came during the 1979 season, Maloney's best at Syracuse, when the Orangemen qualified for the Independence Bowl, beating McNeese State. After coaching the Orangemen for seven seasons and presiding over the opening of a new stadium, the Carrier Dome (renamed in 2022 the JMA Wireless Dome), in 1980, Maloney resigned.[34]

 
Old Archbold Stadium in 1970s

Dick MacPherson era (1981–1990) Edit

Dick MacPherson was hired as the head coach in 1981[35] and after several mediocre seasons, fans wanted MacPherson fired, coining the phrase, "Sack Mac".[36]

However, the fans' opinion of Coach MacPherson changed when the program returned suddenly to national prominence in 1987 with an undefeated 11–0 regular season record.[37] The team featured Maxwell Award-winning quarterback Don McPherson and fullback Daryl Johnston.[38] The team missed an opportunity to play for the NCAA Division I-A national football championship, because both Oklahoma and Miami also finished undefeated that year and finished higher in the polls.[39] Instead, the team faced Southeastern Conference champion Auburn University in the Sugar Bowl.[40] The game ended in a 16–16 tie when Auburn kicked a late field goal rather than trying for a game-winning touchdown.[41] MacPherson left Syracuse after the 1990 season to accept the position of head coach for the NFL's New England Patriots.[42]

McPherson is credited with building a strong recruiting pipeline in the northeast area.[43]

Paul Pasqualoni era (1991–2004) Edit

Syracuse continued to experience success under MacPherson's successor, Paul Pasqualoni, previously the team's linebackers coach,[44] appearing in 11 bowl games (including three major bowls) and winning 9.[45] The team also captured or shared three Big East football championships during this period.

Prominent players of the period included Donovan McNabb, Marvin Harrison, Dwight Freeney, Keith Bulluck, Rob Moore, Donovin Darius, Qadry Ismail, Kevin Johnson, Rob Konrad, Tebucky Jones, and Marvin Graves.[46][47] Rivalries shifted in the early 1990s as Penn State ended its series with Syracuse and joined the Big Ten.[48] Syracuse, meanwhile, joined the newly formed Big East football conference with traditional rival West Virginia University, and national power Miami.[49] In 2004, Miami and Virginia Tech left the Big East to join the Atlantic Coast Conference,[50] followed by Boston College in 2005,[51] threatening the stature of the Big East. Syracuse was originally invited to leave the Big East and join the ACC, but under pressure from the Governor of Virginia, the ACC decided to invite Virginia Tech to join the conference, instead.[52] Thus, Syracuse remained in the Big East. Syracuse's streak of winning seasons ended in 2002 when they went 4–8.[53] This was followed by consecutive 6–6 seasons.[54][55] Although they won a share of the Big East title in 2004 and competed in the Champs Sports Bowl,[56] the teams from 2002 to 2004 were considered mediocre by Syracuse standards. This prompted new athletic director Dr. Daryl Gross to fire Pasqualoni after 14 years at the helm.[57]

Greg Robinson era (2005–2008) Edit

 
Syracuse playing Buffalo in September 2005

In 2005, the university hired Greg Robinson, defensive coordinator for Texas, as head coach.[58] Robinson installed a new West Coast offense scheme, replacing the option run style of offense previously run by Pasqualoni, and new defensive schemes.[59]

The 2005 season started on a high note as Syracuse nearly upset eventual Big East and Sugar Bowl champion West Virginia, forcing five turnovers in the 15–7 loss.[60] They followed it up with a 31–0 thrashing of Buffalo[61] and another near-upset, this time against #25 Virginia, falling 27–24 on a last-second field goal.[62] The squad lost its final eight games of the season. Syracuse finished the year 1–10, the worst on-field season in school history and won only 10 games with Robinson running the program.[63] Robinson's Orange improved to 4–8 in 2006[64] but fell to 2–10 in 2007.[65] The 2007 season included a road upset of number-18 Louisville.[66] When the struggles continued in 2008, Syracuse fired Robinson[67] following a 3–9 season[68] where the high point was a 24–23 upset of Notre Dame.[69] At the other end of the spectrum, in a game that exemplified the Robinson era, the Orange lost 55–13 to Penn State.[70] Robinson's .213 winning percentage on the field is the worst for a non-interim coach in school history. He has been criticized for abandoning the traditional northeast recruiting pipeline.[43]

In 2015, Syracuse vacated all of its wins from 2005 and 2006 due to ineligible players, dropping Robinson's "official" winning percentage to .119.

Doug Marrone era (2009–2012) Edit

 
Coach Doug Marrone and Hall of Fame RB Floyd Little during training camp at Fort Drum, located in Jefferson County, New York

On December 12, 2008, Doug Marrone, a Bronx, New York native and former Orange player, was announced as the replacement for Robinson as head coach.[71][72][73] Marrone was the first Syracuse alumnus to serve as head football coach since Reaves H. Baysinger in 1948.[74] Reportedly, alumni such as Tim Green and Floyd Little wanted Marrone from the moment the previous coach Greg Robinson was fired, and when interviewed by Green, Marrone was found to have kept a folder of current high-school players in the Syracuse area to get a head start in recruiting.[75][76][77]

Improvement throughout the program was noticed immediately, as the Orange, despite only a marginal improvement in their win–loss record, going 4–8 under Marrone for his first year,[78] played many much more closely, including a 28–7 loss at number-seven Penn State.[79] In 2010, the Orange finished the regular season with a winning record for the first time since the 2001 season at 7–5, including road wins against number-19 West Virginia and two-time defending conference champion Cincinnati.[80] The team earned its first bowl bid since 2004 and along with second-ranked Oregon and 10th-ranked Boise State, the five road wins were the best in 2010 of all FBS teams.[81] December 30, 2010, Syracuse defeated Kansas State in the inaugural Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium. The game was televised live on ESPN.[82] Two years later, the Orange defeated West Virginia in the 2012 Pinstripe Bowl.[83] On January 7, 2013, Marrone left Syracuse, accepting the head-coaching position of the NFL's Buffalo Bills.[84]

Scott Shafer era (2013–2015) Edit

The day after Marrone's departure, Syracuse promoted defensive coordinator Scott Shafer to head coach.[85] Coach Shafer's first season was marked by inconsistency from the team in spite of the bowl eligibility for the third time in four years. Syracuse capped off the season with a 21–17 victory over Minnesota in the 2013 Texas Bowl to finish the year 7–6.[86][87] The first season for the Orange in the ACC was 2013.[88] The 2014 season brought about a noticeable drop in quality. Syracuse finished the season a disappointing 3–9.[89] In 2015, after they started the season 3–0, the Orange collapsed, losing 8 of their final 9 games to finish the season 4–8,[90] and on November 23, 2015, it was announced that Shafer would be fired after the last game of the 2015 campaign.[91]

Dino Babers era (2016–present) Edit

 
JMA Dome crowd in 2022

After an extensive coaching search, Syracuse announced the hiring of Bowling Green head coach Dino Babers as the new Orange head football coach.[92] Babers is the first African-American head coach in school history.[93] Babers brought with him an exciting, up-tempo offense he employed both as a head coach and as an assistant coach.[94]

In Babers' first season in charge, Syracuse started the year at 4–4, with the highlight of the first eight games being a 31–17 upset of number-17 Virginia Tech at home.[95] Syracuse kept the momentum from the upset going and beat rival Boston College on the road, 28–20.[96] However, they were blown out 54–0 in their next game by No. 3 Clemson.[97] In the final game of the season, Syracuse lost to ACC rival Pittsburgh by a score of 76–61.[98] The game was the highest scoring in FBS history with a combined score of 137.[99] Syracuse finished 4–8 for the second consecutive year.[100] In 2017, the Orange started 4–3, including a win over No. 2 Clemson,[101] but they lost their final five games to finish 4–8 for the third straight year.[102] In 2018, Syracuse earned its first bowl bid under Babers, going 10-3 with a bowl victory over West Virginia.[103]

In 2022, Syracuse started 6-0, earning a No. 14 ranking in the AP and Coaches' Polls. However, the team squandered a 21-10 halftime lead to Clemson, falling 27-21. The Orange lost their next four games before finishing the season with a win at Boston College to end the year 7-5.[104] Syracuse earned a trip to the Pinstripe Bowl where it lost to Minnesota, 28-20.[105]

Conference affiliations Edit

Syracuse has been independent and affiliated with two conferences.[106]

Championships Edit

National championships Edit

Syracuse finished their undefeated 1959 season with a 23–14 victory over the No. 4 Texas Longhorns in the Cotton Bowl, and were named the national champions by all major selectors (including the major wire-service: AP and Coaches' Poll).[107]

Year Coach Selectors Record Bowl Opponent Result Final AP Final Coaches
1959 Ben Schwartzwalder AP, Billingsley, Boand, DeVold, Football News, Football Research, Football Writers, Helms, Litkenhous, NCF, NFF, Poling, Sagarin (ELO-Chess)*, UPI, Williamson 11–0 Cotton Bowl Texas W 23–14 No. 1 No. 1

Eastern and Conference championships Edit

For much of its history, Syracuse played as an independent, as did the majority of what are now labeled as Division I FBS football-playing schools located in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions. During this time, Eastern Championships were named by independent third-party selectors and awarded of various trophies. The process of picking an Eastern Champion eventually came to be symbolized by the Lambert-Meadowlands Trophy awarded by the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority beginning in 1936. As a result, the Lambert-Meadowlands Trophy, voted on by a panel of sports writers in New York, became the de facto conference championship for those schools.[108]

In 1991, the majority of football independents in the East (including Syracuse) aligned themselves together in the Big East Football Conference. The Big East first crowned an official champion in 1993. In 2013, Syracuse joined the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).

Year Coach Conference Overall record Conference record
1952 Ben Schwartzwalder ECAC (Lambert-Meadowlands Trophy) 7–3
1956 7–2
1959 11–0
1966 8–3
1987 Dick MacPherson 11–0–1
1992 Paul Pasqualoni 10–2
1996 Big East Conference 9–3 6–1
1997 9–4 6–1
1998 8–4 6–1
2004 6–6 4–2
2012 Doug Marrone 8–5 5–2

† Co-champions

Head coaches Edit

 
Frank "Buck" O'Neill in 1901
 
Coach Paul Pasqualoni coached the Orange from 1991 to 2004

There have been 30 head coaches at Syracuse.[109][110] Dino Babers became the most recent head coach in 2016.

Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
1890 Robert Winston 1 7–4 .636
1891 William Galbraith 1 4–6 .400
1892 Jordan C. Wells 1 0–8–1 .056
1894 George H. Bond 1 6–5 .545
1895–1896 George O. Redington 2 11–5–4 .650
1897–1899 Frank E. Wade 3 17–9–2 .643
1900–1902 Edwin R. Sweetland 3 20–5–2 .778
1903 Jason B. Parish & Ancil D. Brown 1 5–4 .556
1904–1905 Charles P. Hutchins 2 14–6 .700
1906–1907

1913–1915

1917–1919

Frank "Buck" O'Neill 8 52–19–6 .714
1908 Howard Jones 1 6–3–1 .650
1909–1910 Tad Jones 2 9–9–2 .500
1911–1912 C. DeForest Cummings 2 9–8–2 .526
1913 Bill Hollenback 1 5–4 .556
1920–1924 Chick Meehan 5 35–8–4 .787
1925–1926 Pete Reynolds 2 15–3–2 .800
1927–1929 Lew Andreas 3 15–10–3 .589
1930–1936 Vic Hanson 7 33–21–5 .602
1937–1942

1944–1945

Ossie Solem 8 30–27–6 .524
1946 Clarence Munn 1 4–5 .444
1947–1948 Reaves Baysinger 2 4–14 .286
1949–1973 Ben Schwartzwalder 25 153–91–3 .626
1974–1980 Frank Maloney 7 32–46 .410
1981–1990 Dick MacPherson 10 66–46–4 .586
1991–2004 Paul Pasqualoni 14 107–59–1 .644
2005–2008 Greg Robinson 4 10–37 .213
2009–2012 Doug Marrone 4 25–25 .500
2013–2015 Scott Shafer 3 14–23 .378
2016–present Dino Babers 7 36–49 .424

Traditions and legacy Edit

Legend of 44 Edit

The No. 44 at Syracuse is one of the most legendary numbers ever associated with a college football program. Like tailbacks at USC or quarterbacks at Purdue, the running back position at Syracuse has a rich tradition of greatness. Much of that greatness has revolved around one jersey number — 44.

Syracuse University officially retired #44 on Saturday, November 12, 2005. Since 1954, 11 players have worn the number and three of the most famous #44sJim Brown, Ernie Davis, and Floyd Little — are in the College Football Hall of Fame.

"The Greatest" Edit

 
Jim Brown '57, Pro Football Hall of Fame and College Football Hall of Fame tailback

Jim Brown played at SU from 1954 to 1956. Brown earned numerous honors as Orange playing college football, basketball, track and field and lacrosse. In his senior year in 1956 Brown was a consensus first-team All-American and led the team to a Cotton Bowl. He finished 5th in the Heisman Trophy voting and set school records for highest season rush average (6.2), most rushing touchdowns in a single game (6), and an NCAA single-game record of 43 points.[111] After his successful college career, Brown went on to become one of the greatest football players of all time.[112]

Jim Brown was an All Pro and a Pro Bowl invitee every season he was in the league, was recognized as the AP NFL Most Valuable Player three times, and won an NFL championship with the Browns in 1964. He led the league in rushing yards in eight out of his nine seasons, and by the time he retired, he had shattered most major rushing records. Brown's memorable professional career led to his induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1971. His football accomplishments at Syracuse garnered him a berth in the College Football Hall of Fame. Jim Brown also earned a spot in the Lacrosse Hall of Fame, giving him a rare triple crown of sorts. Today, he is recognized as the greatest football player ever[113] by most professional football writers.[114]

But Brown's legacy goes beyond sports. Brown was one of the NFL's earliest social issues activists along with a group of top African American athletes from different sporting disciplines such as Bill Russell, Muhammad Ali and Kareem Abdul Jabbar. In the 1960s, Brown co-founded the Black Economic Union to support the growth of black-owned businesses. In the 1980s he also started the Amer-I-Can program which mentors youth in both inner cities and prisons.

"The Elmira Express" Edit

 
Plaque on statue of Ernie Davis, Ernie Davis Academy, Elmira, New York

Ernie Davis, the only Orange player to win the Heisman Trophy, played at Syracuse from 1959 to 1961, and went on to national fame in each of those three seasons, winning first-team All-American honors twice. Davis led the 1959 Syracuse team to a national championship, capping an 11–0 season with a 23–14 win over the Texas Longhorns in the 1960 Cotton Bowl Classic, where Davis was named Most Valuable Player. That same season, Elmira Star-Gazette sports writer Al Mallette coined the nickname for Davis, the "Elmira Express".

During his Cotton Bowl visit to host city Dallas, Texas, Ernie and his black teammates found discrimination prevalent in the American South. Author Jocelyn Selim writes that at the banquet following the 1960 game, Davis was told he could only accept his award and then would be required to leave the segregated facility when the doors were opened to the public for a dance.

Despite the racial issues, Davis became the first black athlete to be awarded the Heisman Trophy (the highest individual honor in collegiate football) and he also won the Walter Camp Memorial Trophy following his 1961 season at Syracuse University. President John F. Kennedy had followed Davis' career and requested to meet him while he was in New York to receive the trophy. Later in 1963, when Elmira chose February 3 to celebrate Davis' achievements, Kennedy sent a telegram, reading:

Seldom has an athlete been more deserving of such a tribute. Your high standards of performance on the field and off the field, reflect the finest qualities of competition, sportsmanship and citizenship. The nation has bestowed upon you its highest awards for your athletic achievements. It's a privilege for me to address you tonight as an outstanding American, and as a worthy example of our youth. I salute you.[115]

Davis was the number-one pick in the 1962 NFL Draft. He was bound to go to the Cleveland Browns where he would be teammates with Jim Brown. Davis signed a three-year contract with the Browns in late December 1961.It was the most lucrative contract for an NFL rookie up to that time.[116]

However, Davis' dream of pairing with Jim Brown took a tragic turn when Davis was diagnosed with leukemia. The disease was incurable and Davis died at age 23 at Cleveland Lakeside Hospital on May 18, 1963.[117] Following his death, the Browns retired his number 45 jersey.

A motion picture biography, The Express: The Ernie Davis Story, directed by Gary Fleder and based on the non-fiction book The Elmira Express: the Story of Ernie Davis by Robert C. Gallagher, began production in April 2007[118] and was released on October 10, 2008.

His commemorative statue now stands in front of the school named in his honor, Ernie Davis Academy. Another statue of Davis stands on the campus of Syracuse University, near the steps of Hendricks Chapel and the Shaw Quad where pre-game pep rallies are held. He was inducted to the College Football Hall of Fame in the fall of 1979.

"The Franchise" Edit

 
Floyd Little

Floyd Little played for Syracuse from 1964 to 1966. He is the only three-time All-American running back to compete for the Syracuse University Orangemen. He finished 5th in Heisman Trophy voting in both 1965 and 1966. Floyd was the leading force behind teams that earned tickets to the Sugar Bowl in 1964 and the Gator Bowl in 1966 (teaming with another great tailback Larry Csonka in the latter). In addition to breaking the running records of Brown and Davis, Little became the greatest kick returner in Orange history. He led the country in all-purpose yardage, averaging 199 yards per game in 1965.[119]

Floyd Little was the first ever first-round draft pick to sign with the American Football League's Denver Broncos. During his rookie year, Little led the NFL in punt returns with a 16.9-yard average. He led the NFL in combined yards in 1967 and 1968 and was the first ever Bronco to win a rushing title, leading the AFC in rushing in 1970 and the following year he became the first Bronco to eclipse 1,000 yards, gaining 1,133 to lead the NFL.[120] Little was Denver Broncos team captain all 9 seasons, including his rookie season and he was known as "The Franchise". Floyd Little retired as the NFL's 7th all-time leading rusher with 6,323 yards. He later was inducted both in the College and Pro Football Hall of Fame. To honor his achievements Denver Broncos retired his #44 jersey.

Statues of Davis (second on campus), Brown and Little are at Syracuse University's Plaza 44, commemorating the number the running backs wore while playing football. No. 44 has become so associated with Syracuse that the university's ZIP code, 13244, was requested by university officials to remember those who wore 44 for the Orange. “Number 44 not only has come to represent greatness on the football field, it has become a part of the university's and the community's identity”.[119]

Pride of the Orange Edit

 
Syracuse band performing at Super Bowl XLVIII.

The Syracuse University Marching Band (SUMB), also known as the "Pride of the Orange", is the collegiate marching band of Syracuse University. The SUMB performs at all home football games throughout the season, and also makes several local parades and other performances throughout the year. It is one of the largest student organizations at Syracuse University, consisting of approximately 200 members. Founded in 1901, it is one of the oldest collegiate bands in the nation. Over the course of almost 120 years, the "Pride of the Orange" has played a huge role in University history and has been a constant source of pride for the University.[121]

  • 'Cuse on the Quad Starting three hours prior to Syracuse football home games, fans attend the social meeting, children's playground, food and beverages garden areas organized by the University located directly on the Quad, the center of the campus. Fans can watch College Game Day or the top college football games streaming live on ESPN under the tents. Fans can also take in the sights and sounds of local DJs, live music, and the Syracuse University Marching Band which performs on the steps of Hendrick's Chapel about an hour before kickoff.
  • Down the Field The band has first officially performed at a football game in 1925.[122] Over the decades, after every touchdown scored by the Orange, the SUMB plays the Syracuse University fight song, "Down the Field" (1914), written by Ralph Murphy, Class of 1916, and composed by C. Harold Lewis, Class of 1915. Win or lose, the Alma Mater is played by the band after every football game. The team will gather in the end zone with the cheerleaders and Otto and sing the song. Students and fans often wrap their arms around the shoulders of those standing next to them and sway side to side.
  • Flip the Banner at Varsity Varsity, a pizza shop just outside the campus, has been passed down for three generations since 1926. The Varsity has been an integral part of SU sports culture for decades. The Orange schedule is displayed with banners hanging on the walls of the restaurant. After victories, the "Pride of the Orange" goes to Varsity and will play their sets inside the restaurant. After the band plays, the banner of the opposing team will be flipped upside down to symbolize the victory. For the entire season, the banners will tell the tale of Syracuse's season.

Rivalries Edit

Boston College Edit

The two schools first met on October 18, 1924, a 10–0 win for the Syracuse Orange.[123] The Eagles and the Orange began playing an annual game in 1961. To date, Boston College and Syracuse have played each other 46 times.[124] Aside from Holy Cross, no team has played Boston College more than Syracuse. In 2004, the Eagles' last year in the Big East, the Orange pulled off a surprising upset that kept the Eagles from going to their first BCS game. BC's departure from the Big East put the future of the rivalry in doubt. Syracuse's admission into the ACC in 2013 resurrected the rivalry, with the two teams playing each another annually as members of the ACC's Atlantic Division.

Syracuse leads the series 31–20 through the 2018 season.[125]

Pittsburgh Edit

The rivalry with fellow ACC conference member Pittsburgh began in 1916, and has been played annually since 1955. The Panthers and Orange were both Eastern football independents for most of their history but have shared the same football conference since 1991 when the Big East Football Conference was formed from Eastern football independents. Pitt is tied as the most played opponent for Syracuse and Syracuse is the third most played opponent for Pitt. Sharing membership in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) since 2013, the Panthers and Orange have played a total of 74 times. Pittsburgh leads the series 39–31–3 through the 2018 season.[126]

West Virginia Edit

Syracuse and West Virginia have played 60 times. Often, these games have had a bearing on which collegiate program was the best in the East. In much of the '80s and '90s, Syracuse and West Virginia made for one of the Big East's best head-to-head match-ups on a yearly basis. West Virginia then left the Big East for the Big 12 Conference in 2012.[127]

The Ben Schwartzwalder Trophy goes to the winner of the West Virginia and Syracuse football game. The trophy was introduced in 1993 and is named after former WVU football player and Syracuse head coach Ben Schwartzwalder, who had died in March of that year.[128] The trophy weighs 55 pounds and was sculpted by Syracuse player Jim Ridlon.

West Virginia won the first trophy game at Syracuse and has gone on to win 11.[129] Syracuse has won the trophy eight times and currently holds it.[130] Syracuse leads the series 34–27 with the last two games played in 2012 Pinstripe Bowl and 2018 Camping World Bowl.[131] Syracuse is currently on the 4 game winning streak.

Penn State Edit

The "heyday" of the Syracuse Penn State rivalry took place during the 1950s and 1960s when the teams battled back and forth in a competitive and often controversial string of contests. Syracuse football was led by legendary coach Ben Schwartzwalder, and Penn State by Rip Engle from 1950 to 1966 and Joe Paterno from 1967 to 2011. From 1950 to 1970, Syracuse won 11 to Penn State's 10 games. Unfortunately conference realignment and scheduling disagreements have dampened the intensity of the rivalry between the teams in recent years.

The teams first met on October 28, 1922 at the New York Polo Grounds battling to a scoreless[citation needed] tie kick-starting an East coast rivalry that has seen 71 total match-ups with the teams meeting almost every season from 1922 to 1990. The only exception was during the 1943 season, when Syracuse did not field team in light of World War II.[citation needed] From 1922 to 1940 Syracuse held a 10-4-4 advantage over the Nittany Lions, before Penn State would win 8 straight from 1941 to 1949. In the 1947 match-up, Penn State prevailed 40–0 in State College behind a staunch defense that held the Orange to (-47) total yards which is an NCAA record. (-107 rushing, 60 passing, in 49 plays)[132] From 1956 to 1966 the Orange regained command winning 8 out of 11. Since 1967, the Nittany Lions have dominated winning 24 of 27 match-ups including 16 straight from 1971 to 1986. In 1987, Dick MacPherson coached Syracuse to a 48–21 victory over the Nittany Lions in the JMA Wireless Dome. Syracuse won again the following year at Penn State, but lost the final two games before the suspension of the series in 1991.[133]

Penn State leads the all-time series 43–23–5, and have won 5 straight. The most recent match-up was played at Metlife Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ; a 23–17 win for Penn State.[134]

The teams do not have any future match-ups scheduled.

Colgate Edit

For many years, Syracuse's main football rivals were the nearby Colgate Red Raiders. Colgate and Syracuse first played each other in football in 1891, with Colgate recording a 22–16 victory. The Red Raiders would go on the win 12 of the first 16 games in the series. Colgate's early dominance in the series quickly gave rise to the legend of the Hoodoo (a play on a corruption of the word Voodoo). The schools have played each other a total of 67 times, with the series tied at 31-31-5.

By the late 1950s, Syracuse had established itself as a major power in Eastern college football, and the games became increasingly one-sided. Following the 1961 contest, Colgate terminated the series, in order to focus on playing smaller, peer institutions.

Following the NCAA's I-A/I-AA split in 1978, the rivalry was intermittently renewed in the 1980s, with Syracuse comfortably winning all three games played in the decade. In 2010, the rivalry was renewed again after a 23-year absence, with Syracuse recording a 42–7 victory.[135][136] The series resumed again in 2016, when Syracuse hosted Colgate in a game played in the JMA Wireless Dome,[137] which Syracuse won 33–7.

Uniforms Edit

 
Syracuse helmet design history
 
Current helmets worn by the Orange

Syracuse University adopted orange color as its official color in 1890. The color was selected after a vote by students, alumni, faculty, and trustees, who noted it was a strong, bright color not claimed by any other school. Syracuse University was the first school to adopt only one primary color. It was chosen to "represent the golden apples of Hesperia, as well as the story of the sunrise and hope for a golden future."[138]

The first uniforms of the Orange were classic white sweaters and dark pants. Syracuse football wore these from 1889 to 1919. Orange color was first worn in the 1920s. A blue number was stitched on the back of orange jerseys, and the dark pants were replaced with Khaki moleskin. Blue began to be generally recognized as a secondary color of Syracuse.[139]

During its glory years beginning with the first bowl game appearance in 1952, Syracuse football used to wear white jerseys and orange pants at home at Archbold stadium. From 1952 to 1966, coach Ben Schwartzwalder, with his military background and always looking for an edge, thought white jerseys made his players look bigger, faster and stronger. During his first three seasons (1949–51) and in 1958, he also experimented with an all orange look to camouflage the football.[140] Blue jerseys were rarely seen during that era as Syracuse wore them only three times.

The switch to blue and orange combination at home came in 1967. Since then, it was blue jersey and orange pants at home until the first three Frank Maloney seasons (1974–76) when the newly assigned coach wanted to move away from the Schwartzwalder era with orange jerseys and unusually designed white helmets, before bringing blue jerseys and orange helmets back for essentially the next 28 seasons. Syracuse started wearing white jerseys and orange jerseys (and pants) at home again in the 2000s. Three colors (orange, white and blue) have been used in several combinations throughout the years.

Bowl games Edit

Since the establishment of the team in 1890, Syracuse has appeared in 27 bowl games. Included in these games are 10 combined appearances in the "New Year's Six" bowl games (the Rose, Sugar, Cotton, Orange, Fiesta and Peach) and 1 Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game appearances. The New Year's Six represent six of the ten oldest bowl games played at the FBS level (missing the Sun, Gator, Citrus and Liberty bowls), continuing their original history of putting the very best teams in the country against each other.

Syracuse's all-time bowl record is 16 wins, 10 losses and 1 tie (16–10–1).

Syracuse Orange Bowl Games
# Bowl Score Date Season Opponent Stadium Attendance Head coach
1 Orange Bowl L 6–61 January 1, 1953 1952 Alabama Orange Bowl 66,280 Ben Schwartzwalder
2 Cotton Bowl Classic L 27–28 January 1, 1957 1956 TCU Cotton Bowl 61,500 Ben Schwartzwalder
3 Orange Bowl L 6–21 January 1, 1959 1958 Oklahoma Orange Bowl 75,281 Ben Schwartzwalder
4 Cotton Bowl Classic W 23–14 January 1, 1960 1959 Texas Cotton Bowl 75,500 Ben Schwartzwalder
5 Liberty Bowl W 15–14 December 16, 1961 1961 Miami Philadelphia Municipal Stadium 15,712 Ben Schwartzwalder
6 Sugar Bowl L 10–13 January 1, 1965 1964 LSU Tulane Stadium 65,000 Ben Schwartzwalder
7 Gator Bowl L 12–18 December 31, 1966 1966 Tennessee Gator Bowl Stadium 60,312 Ben Schwartzwalder
8 Independence Bowl W 31–7 December 15, 1979 1979 McNeese State Independence Stadium 27,234 Frank Maloney
9 Cherry Bowl L 18–35 December 21, 1985 1985 Maryland Pontiac Silverdome 51,858 Dick MacPherson
10 Sugar Bowl T 16–16 January 1, 1988 1987 Auburn Louisiana Superdome 75,495 Dick MacPherson
11 Hall of Fame Bowl W 23–10 January 1, 1989 1988 LSU Tampa Stadium 51,112 Dick MacPherson
12 Peach Bowl W 19–18 December 30, 1989 1989 Georgia Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium 44,991 Dick MacPherson
13 Aloha Bowl W 28–0 December 25, 1990 1990 Arizona Aloha Stadium 14,185 Dick MacPherson
14 Hall of Fame Bowl W 24–17 January 1, 1992 1991 Ohio State Tampa Stadium 57,789 Paul Pasqualoni
15 Fiesta Bowl W 26–22 January 1, 1993 1992 Colorado Sun Devil Stadium 70,224 Paul Pasqualoni
16 Gator Bowl W 41–0 January 1, 1996 1995 Clemson Jacksonville Municipal Stadium 45,202 Paul Pasqualoni
17 Liberty Bowl W 30–17 December 27, 1996 1996 Houston Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium 49,163 Paul Pasqualoni
18 Fiesta Bowl L 18–35 December 31, 1997 1997 Kansas State Sun Devil Stadium 69,367 Paul Pasqualoni
19 Orange Bowl L 10–31 January 2, 1999 1998 Florida Orange Bowl 67,919 Paul Pasqualoni
20 Music City Bowl W 20–13 December 29, 1999 1999 Kentucky Adelphia Coliseum 59,221 Paul Pasqualoni
21 Insight.com Bowl W 26–3 December 29, 2001 2001 Kansas State Bank One Ballpark 40,028 Paul Pasqualoni
22 Champs Sports Bowl L 14–51 December 21, 2004 2004 Georgia Tech Citrus Bowl 28,237 Paul Pasqualoni
23 Pinstripe Bowl W 36–34 December 30, 2010 2010 Kansas State Yankee Stadium 38,274 Doug Marrone
24 Pinstripe Bowl W 38–14 December 29, 2012 2012 West Virginia Yankee Stadium 39,098 Doug Marrone
25 Texas Bowl W 21–17 December 27, 2013 2013 Minnesota Reliant Stadium 32,327 Scott Shafer
26 Camping World Bowl W 34–18 December 28, 2018 2018 West Virginia Camping World Stadium 41,125 Dino Babers
27 Pinstripe Bowl L 20–28 December 29, 2022 2022 Minnesota Yankee Stadium 31,131 Dino Babers

National polls Edit

Syracuse has finished in the Final Top 25 rankings 21 times in the national polls, and finished in either the AP or Coaches Polls a combined 35 times since 1952. Syracuse has appeared in over 200 AP Polls including 7 weeks at AP No.1.[141]

Syracuse Final Rankings
Year Record AP Poll† Coaches‡
1952 7–3 14
1956 7–2 8 8
1958 8–2 9 10
1959 11–0 1 1
1960 7–2 19
1961 8–3 14 16
1963 8–2 12
1964 7–4 12
1966 8–3 16
1967 8–2 12
1987 11–0–1 4 4
1988 10–2 13 12
Year Record AP Poll† Coaches‡
1990 7–4–2 21
1991 10–2 11 11
1992 10–2 6 7
1995 9–3 19 16
1996 9–3 22 19
1997 9–4 21 20
1998 8–4 25 24
2001 10–3 14 14
2018 10–3 15 15

AP Poll began selecting the nation's Top 20 teams in 1936. Only the Top 10 teams were recognized from 1962 to 1967. The AP Poll expanded back to the Top 20 teams in 1968. In 1989, it began recognizing the Top 25 teams.

UPI/Coaches Poll began selecting its Top 20 teams on a weekly basis in 1950 before expanding to the nations's Top 25 teams in 1990.

Individual award winners Edit

Retired numbers Edit

Syracuse University retired six jersey numbers and hung them in the JMA Wireless Dome rafters.[142]

Syracuse Orange football retired numbers
             
Donovan McNabb
1995–1998
Don McPherson
1984–1987
Larry Csonka
1965–1967
(25 players) 1
1921-1998
Joe Morris
1978–1981
Tim Green
1982–1986
John Mackey
1960–1962
Notes

1 The complete list of players who wore number 44 (by chronological order): Gifford Zimmerman, Charles Roberts, Clarence Taylor, Don Baldwin, Richard Fishel, Henry Merz, Hamilton Watt, Francis Mullins, Stanley Stanislay, Benjamin DeYoung, Francis Mazejko, Richard Ransom, J. O'Brien, Robert Eberling, Jim Brown, Thomas Stephens, Ernie Davis, William Schoonover, Floyd Little, Richard Panczyszyn, Mandel Robinson, Glenn Moore, Michael Owens, Terry Richardson, and Rob Konrad.

The 150 greatest players in college football's 150-year history Edit

Jim Brown is named as the greatest player in college football history. ESPN unveiled college football's 150 greatest players of the first 150 years of history of college football. ESPN's top 150 players were determined by a blue-ribbon panel of current and former writers, broadcasters, administrators, sports information directors and ESPN personalities.[143][144]

Rank Name Pos. Years
1 Jim Brown RB 1954-56
15 Ernie Davis RB 1959-61
52 Floyd Little RB 1964–66

Heisman Trophy voting Edit

Name Pos. Year Place
Dwight Freeney DE 2001 9th
Donovan McNabb QB 1998 5th
Don McPherson QB 1987 2nd
Larry Csonka FB 1967 4th
Floyd Little RB 1966 5th
Floyd Little RB 1965 5th
Ernie Davis RB 1961 1st
Jim Brown HB 1956 5th

National award winners Edit

Heisman Trophy
Best player
1961 Ernie Davis
Walter Camp Trophy
Best player
1961 Ernie Davis
Maxwell Award
Best player
1987 Don McPherson
Walter Camp All-Century Team
Best player of the century
2000 Jim Brown
Walter Camp Man of the Year
Man of the Year
1978 Floyd Little
Walter Camp
Alumni of the Year

Distinction in excellence as an athlete
2000 Don McPherson
Chic Harley Award
College Football Player
1961 Ernie Davis
Bronko Nagurski Trophy
Best defensive player
2001 Dwight Freeney
Chuck Bednarik Award
Best defensive player
2001 Dwight Freeney †
Davey O'Brien Award
Best quarterback
1987 Don McPherson
1993 Marvin Graves
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award
Best senior quarterback
1987 Don McPherson
1993 Marvin Graves †
1998 Donovan McNabb
Sammy Baugh Trophy
Best quarterback
1987 Don McPherson
Jim Thorpe Award
Best defensive back
1987 Markus Paul
1988 Markus Paul †
Lombardi Award
Best lineman or linebacker
1984 Tim Green
1985 Tim Green
1987 Ted Gregory
2001 Dwight Freeney
Lou Groza Award
Best kicker
2018 Andre Szmyt
Vlade Award
Most accurate placekicker
2018 Andre Szmyt
Walter Camp
Distinguished American Award

Great success in business or public service
2011 Floyd Little
NFF Distinguished American Award
Excellence in scholarship, citizenship, leadership
1982 Jim Brown
Silver Anniversary Awards
Achievement in life
1982 Jim Brown
1992 Floyd Little
2011 Tim Green
AFCA Good Works Team
Accomplishments off the field
2000 Kyle Johnson
2001 Graham Manley
2004 Matt Tarulo
2014 Sam Rodgers
2018 Kielan Whitner
Academic All-America
Hall of Fame

Outstanding collegiate scholar-athletes
2006 Tim Green

Finalist

National coaching awards Edit

AFCA Coach of the Year
Best head coach
1959 Ben Schwartzwalder
1987 Dick MacPherson
Walter Camp Coach of the Year
Best head coach
1987 Dick MacPherson
Woody Hayes Trophy
Best head coach
1987 Dick MacPherson
Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year
Best head coach
1987 Dick MacPherson
Paul "Bear" Bryant Award
Best coach
1987 Dick MacPherson
Walter Camp Man of the Year
Man of the Year
1973 Duffy Daugherty
Amos Alonzo Stagg Award
Outstanding services in the advancement
of the best interests of football
1970 Pappy Waldorf
1977 Ben Schwartzwalder
1985 Duffy Daugherty

Consensus All-Americans Edit

Syracuse football players have earned All-America honors over 130 times since 1908. Among those selections, 20 have achieved Consensus All-American status. Of those consensus All-Americans, 9 are unanimous selections. Below is the list of first team All Americans named by major selectors.

 
Larry Csonka
 
Dwight Freeney
All-America team selections
Season Name Pos.
1908 Frank "Bill" Horr* T
1908 Claude Fisher E
1915 Harold White* G
1915 Red Wilkinson HB
1915 Chris Schlachter G
1917 Chris Schlachter G
1917 Alfred Cobb* T
1918 Lou Usher* G
1918 Willard Ackley QB
1918 Doc Alexander G
1919 Doc Alexander* G
1920 Doc Alexander* G
1920 Bertrand Gulick T
1923 Pete MacRae* E
1924 Pappy Waldorf T
1924 Jack McBride B
1926 Vic Hanson* E
1930 George A. Ellert E
1934 Jim Steen T
1952 Bob Fleck G
1953 Bob Fleck G
1955 Jim Brown HB
1956 Jim Brown# HB
1958 Ron Luciano T
1959 Roger Davis# G
Season Name Pos.
1959 Robert Yates T
1959 Fred Mautino E
1960 Ernie Davis* HB
1961 Ernie Davis# HB
1964 Pat Killorin C
1964 Floyd Little RB
1965 Floyd Little RB
1965 Pat Killorin C
1965 Charlie Brown DB
1966 Floyd Little RB
1966 Gary Bugenhagen G
1966 Larry Csonka FB
1967 Larry Csonka# FB
1968 Tony Kyasky DB
1968 Art Thoms DL
1970 Joe Ehrmann DL
1971 Tom Myers DB
1975 Ray Preston LB
1978 Joe Morris RB
1979 Art Monk WR
1981 Gary Anderson K
1982 Mike Charles DL
1984 Tim Green DL
1985 Tim Green# DL
1987 Ted Gregory* DL
Season Name Pos.
1987 Don McPherson# QB
1988 Markus Paul DB
1989 Rob Moore WR
1989 John Flannery C
1990 John Flannery* C
1991 Qadry Ismail KR
1992 Chris Gedney# TE
1992 Marvin Graves QB
1995 Marvin Harrison AP
1995 Kevin Abrams DB
1996 Kevin Abrams DB
1996 Antwaune Ponds LB
1997 Donovin Darius S
1997 Quinton Spotwood KR
1997 Donovan McNabb QB
1998 Kevin Johnson KR
1999 Keith Bulluck LB
2001 Dwight Freeney# DE
2008 Tony Fiammetta FB
2009 Chandler Jones DE
2012 Ryan Nassib QB
2017 Steve Ishmael WR
2018 Andre Szmyt# K
2018 Andre Cisco S
2021 Sean Tucker RB
* – Consensus All-Americans
# – Unanimous All-Americans

Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) awards Edit

ECAC Player of the Year
1966 Floyd Little
1967 Larry Csonka
1987 Don McPherson
ECAC Offensive Player of the Year
1979 Bill Hurley
1980 Joe Morris
ECAC Defensive Player of the Year
1985 Tim Green
ECAC Rookie of the Year
1990 Marvin Graves

Big East Conference awards Edit

Offensive Player of the Year
1996 Donovan McNabb
1997 Donovan McNabb
1998 Donovan McNabb
ECAC Coach of the Year
1992 Paul Pasqualoni
1995 Paul Pasqualoni
1996 Paul Pasqualoni
Defensive Player of the Year
1991 George Rooks
1997 Donovin Darius
2001 Dwight Freeney
AFCA Regional
Coach of the Year
2010 Doug Marrone
Rookie of the Year
1995 Donovin Darius
Special Teams Player of the Year
1992 John Biskup
1993 Pat O'Neil
1995 Marvin Harrison
1997 Quinton Spotwood
1998 Kevin Johnson
ECAC Rookie of the Year
1994 Antwaune Ponds
1995 Donovan McNabb
2011 Dyshawn Davis
Scholar Athlete of the Year
2001 Kyle Johnson
2012 Ryan Nassib

Big East Football 10th Anniversary honors Edit

The best players of the decade and the team, which includes 29 players, was selected by Big East media members to celebrate the 10th year of Big East football.[145]

Offensive Player of the Decade
QB Donovan McNabb
Special Teams Player of the Decade
KR/WR Kevin Johnson
Big East Team of the Decade
QB Donovan McNabb
WR Marvin Harrison
KR Kevin Johnson
CB Kevin Abrams
S Donovin Darius

Atlantic Coast Conference awards Edit

AP ACC Coach of the Year
2018 Dino Babers
ECAC Coach of the Year
2018 Dino Babers
ECAC Offensive Player of the Year
2018 Eric Dungey
ECAC Defensive Rookie of the Year
2018 Andre Cisco
ECAC Rookie of the Year
2021 Duce Chestnut

co-winner

ACC All-Conference selections Edit

Syracuse football players in All-ACC teams since 2013.

All-ACC team selections
Season Name Pos.
2013 Macky MacPherson C
2013 Jerome Smith RB
2013 Durell Eskridge S
2013 Jay Bromley DT
2014 Sean Hickey T
2014 Cameron Lynch LB
2015 Riley Dixon* P
2015 Ron Thompson DE
2015 Brisly Estime APB
2016 Amba Etta-Tawo* WR
2016 Zaire Franklin LB
2016 Brisly Estime APB
2016 Sterling Hofrichter P
2017 Steve Ishmael* WR
Season Name Pos.
2017 Ervin Philips WR
2017 Parris Bennett LB
2017 Cole Murphy K
2018 Sean Riley APB
2018 Andre Szmyt* K
2018 Sterling Hofrichter* P
2018 Jamal Custis WR
2018 Alton Robinson DE
2018 Andre Cisco* S
2018 Ryan Guthrie LB
2018 Eric Dungey QB
2018 Koda Martin T
2019 Sterling Hofrichter* P
2019 Trishton Jackson WR
Season Name Pos.
2019 Andre Cisco S
2019 Lakiem Williams LB
2019 Andre Szmyt K
2020 Nykeim Johnson KR
2020 Taj Harris WR
2020 Nolan Cooney P
2020 Ifeatu Melifonwu CB
2021 Duce Chestnut CB
2021 Cody Roscoe* DE
2021 Sean Tucker* RB
2021 Mikel Jones* LB
2022 Mikel Jones LB
2022 Sean Tucker RB
2022 Sean Tucker APB
Season Name Pos.
2022 Matthew Bergeron T
2022 Oronde Gadsden II* WR
* – 1st All-ACC

Hall of Fame Edit

 
QB Donovan McNabb at the 1999 NFL Draft
 
Marvin Harrison, Hall of Fame WR

College Football Hall of Fame Edit

Syracuse is one of the most represented schools in the National Football Foundation's College Hall of Fame. The Orange have 18 enshrinees, second-most among ACC programs behind Pittsburgh (25). Syracuse has had 11 players and 7 former coaches inducted into the Hall of Fame.[146]

Name Pos. Years Inducted
Frank "Buck" O'Neill HC 1906-07; 1913–15; 1917–19; 1936 1951
Howard Jones HC 1908 1951
Joe Alexander G 1917–1920 1954
Tad Jones HC 1909–1910 1958
Biggie Munn HC 1946 1959
Lynn 'Pappy' Waldorf T 1922-1924 1966
Bud Wilkinson HC 1938-41 1969
Jim Brown HB 1954–1956 1971
Vic Hanson E/HC 1924-26; 1928–36 1973
Ernie Davis HB 1959–1961 1979
Ben Schwartzwalder HC 1949–1973 1982
Floyd Little RB 1964–1966 1983
Hugh "Duffy" Daugherty G/HC 1937-39; 1940, 1946 1984
Larry Csonka FB 1965–1967 1989
Tim Green DT 1982–1985 2002
Don McPherson QB 1984–1987 2008
Dick MacPherson HC 1980–1990 2009
Art Monk WR 1976–1979 2012
Dwight Freeney DE 1998–2001 2023

Pro Football Hall of Fame Edit

 
Art Monk, Hall of Fame WR

Syracuse's legacy in the Pro Football Hall of Fame ranks among the finest of any college football program. The Orange boast eight inductees, tied for the eight-most of any school. Only Notre Dame (13), USC (13), Michigan (11), Ohio State (10), Miami (9), and Pittsburgh (9) have more representatives in the Pro Football Hall of Fame than Syracuse.[147]

Name Team (Years) Position Inducted
Jim Brown Cleveland Browns (1957–65) HB 1971
Jim Ringo Green Bay Packers (1953–63) C 1981
Larry Csonka Miami Dolphins (1968–74, 1979) FB 1987
John Mackey Baltimore Colts (1963–71) TE 1992
Al Davis Oakland Raiders (1963-2011) Owner/GM/Commissioner 1992
Art Monk Washington Redskins (1980–93) WR 2008
Floyd Little Denver Broncos (1967–75) RB 2010
Marvin Harrison Indianapolis Colts (1996-2008) WR 2016

Orange in the National Football League Edit

NFL All-Time Team Edit

The National Football League 100th Anniversary All-Time Team was revealed in 2019 after being voted on by a panel consisting of media members, former players and league personnel. It honored the best players of the first 100 years of the National Football League (NFL). The team was chosen by a panel of 26 voters made up of coaches, team and front office executives, former players and members of the media between April and June 2018. Players were selected at each position group, and were voted in no order. There will be 10 quarterbacks, 12 running backs, 10 wide receivers, 5 tight ends, 7 tackles, 7 guards, 4 centers, 7 defensive ends, 7 defensive tackles, 6 outside linebackers, 6 middle/inside linebackers, 7 cornerbacks, 6 safeties, 2 kickers, 2 punters, 2 kick/punt returners, and 10 coaches. Sources:[148][149][150][151][152][153][154][155][156]

Position Player Team(s) played for Accolades
RB Jim Brown Cleveland Browns (1957–1965) Hall of Fame (1971), NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team, NFL 1960s All-Decade Team, NFL Rookie of the Year (1957), 3× AP NFL Most Valuable Player (1957, 1958, 1965), 8× First-team All-Pro (19571961, 19631965), 9× Pro Bowler (19571965), NFL champion (1964)
WR Marvin Harrison Indianapolis Colts (1996–2008) Hall of Fame (2016), NFL 2000s All-Decade Team, 3× First-team All-Pro (1999, 2002, 2006), 8× Pro Bowler (19992006), Super Bowl champion (XLI)
TE John Mackey Baltimore Colts (1963–1971)
San Diego Chargers (1972)
Hall of Fame (1992), NFL 1960s All-Decade Team, 3× First-team All-Pro (19661968), 4× Pro Bowler (1963, 19661968), NFL champion (1968), Super Bowl champion (V)

Bold Unanimous selection.[148][151][154][156]

NFL All-Decade Teams Edit

 
 
Tom Coughlin in the White House after winning a Super Bowl with the New York Giants
 
Chandler Jones

NFL Individual Awards Edit

NFL MVP
Name Team Pos. Year
Jim Brown Cleveland Browns RB 1957, 1958, 1963, 1965
AFL MVP
Name Team Pos. Year
Jim Nance New England Patriots RB 1966
NFC Player of the Year
Name Team Pos. Year
Donovan McNabb Philadelphia Eagles QB 2000
 
All-Decade (2000s) NFL Executive Scott Pioli

All-Pro and Pro Bowls Edit

Orange in the Pro Bowls and as All-Pro
Name Team Pos. Pro-Bowl All-Pro
Jim Ringo Green Bay Packers
Philadelphia Eagles
C 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1966
Jim Brown Cleveland Browns RB 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965
Walt Sweeney San Diego Chargers G 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1970, 1971, 1972 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971
Marvin Harrison Indianapolis Colts WR 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 2004, 2005, 2006 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 2004, 2005, 2006
Dwight Freeney Indianapolis Colts DE 2003, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 2003, 2004, 2005, 2009
Larry Csonka Miami Dolphins FB 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974 1971, 1972, 1973
Floyd Little Denver Broncos RB 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1973 1969, 1970, 1971
John Mackey Baltimore Colts TE 1963, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968 1966, 1967, 1968
Donovan McNabb Philadelphia Eagles QB 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009
Gary Anderson Pittsburgh Steelers
Minnesota Vikings
K 1983, 1985, 1993, 1998 1983, 1985, 1998
Chandler Jones New England Patriots
Arizona Cardinals
DE 2015, 2017, 2019, 2021 2017, 2019
Art Monk Washington Redskins WR 1984, 1985, 1986 1984, 1985
Keith Bulluck Tennessee Titans LB 2003, 2004 2002, 2003, 2004
Jim Nance New England Patriots FB 1966, 1967 1966, 1967, 1969
Daryl Johnston Dallas Cowboys FB 1993, 1994 1993, 1994
Rob Moore New York Jets
Arizona Cardinals
WR 1994, 1997 1997
Joe Morris New York Giants RB 1985, 1986 1986
Stan Walters Philadelphia Eagles T 1978, 1979 1979
Jim Collins Los Angeles Rams LB 1984, 1985 1984, 1985
Al Bemiller Buffalo Bills C 1965
Rob Burnett Cleveland Browns DE 1994 2000
Olindo Mare Miami Dolphins K 1999 1999
Tom Myers New Orleans Saints DB 1979 1979
David Tyree New York Giants WR 2005 2005
Otis Wilson Chicago Bears LB 1985 1984, 1985
Joe Ehrmann Baltimore Colts DT 1975 1976
Doc Alexander Rochester Jeffersons C 1921, 1922
Jack McBride New York Giants FB 1925
Jim Ridlon Dallas Cowboys DB 1964

Facilities Edit

Archbold Stadium Edit

 
Archbold Stadium seating stands in 1914
 
Archbold Stadium arch entrance (1922)

Upon its completion in 1907, Archbold Stadium was touted as the "Greatest Athletic Arena in America." Designed to resemble the Roman Coliseum and to never become outdated, Archbold Stadium was a trademark of Syracuse Orange football.[158] The stadium was named for John D. Archbold, who donated $600,000 for the project. The Orange battled for victory inside the walls of Archbold Stadium from 1907 until 1978. Orange fans of the early 1900s were astonished by Archbold's unique design. The stadium's front entrance defined the character of Archbold, which consisted of an impressive cement arch and two epic towers, which extended high above the archway.

In addition to providing the University and the fans with an aesthetically beautiful stadium, Archbold gave the Orange football team a distinct home field advantage for all 71 years of its existence. The Orange went 265-112-20 all-time at Archbold, and at times were nearly unbeatable. From 1915 to 1927, Syracuse achieved a remarkable home record of 61-10-6. Then, during the 11-year stretch from 1958 to 1968, the team in Orange won 47 and lost only 6 games played at Archbold Stadium.[158]

Toward the end of the 1970s, Syracuse University was under pressure to improve its football facilities in order to remain a Division I-A football school. Archbold Stadium could not be expanded; earlier in the decade it had been reduced from 40,000 seats to 26,000 due to fire codes. Therefore, Syracuse University decided to build a new stadium on the site of Archbold, which, appropriately for Syracuse's often cold weather, was to have a domed Teflon-coated, fiberglass inflatable roof. While the JMA Wireless Dome was being built during the 1979 season, Syracuse played "home" games at three different locations—Giants Stadium, home of the NFL's New York Giants; Rich Stadium (now known as New Era Field), home of the NFL's Buffalo Bills; and Schoellkopf Field, home of the Cornell Big Red.

The JMA Wireless Dome Edit

 
The JMA Dome (2021)

The Syracuse Orange football team plays their games at the JMA Wireless Dome, referred to as the JMA Dome. The stadium is also known as "The Loud House", when it opened in September 1980, it was made clear just how loud it was inside; soon famous nickname was coined. It is the largest domed stadium of any college campus and the largest domed stadium in the Northeastern United States. The JMA Wireless Dome is used for several sports at the university and seats 49,250 for football.[1] The field was dedicated in 2009 to Ernie Davis, the first African American Heisman Trophy winner. The field now reads "Ernie Davis Legends Field" between the 45 yard lines on the home side. Davis's number forty-four was also placed along that yard line. The dedication took place at the Syracuse vs. West Virginia game October 10, 2009.[159]

In May 2018, the university announced the first phase of a major renovation to the JMA Wireless Dome as the central portion of a larger campus update. The most significant changes were the replacement of the current air-supported roof with a fixed roof, two-thirds of which will be translucent, the installation of air conditioning and the largest centerhung videoboard in college sports.[160] The upgrade also included a new lighting and sound systems, Wi-Fi improvements, accessibility upgrades, improved restrooms, and new concession spaces.[161] The high-profile renovation project by Geiger Engineers - the same firm that was the structural engineer for the original stadium, was named a winner of NCSEA's 2021 Excellence in Structural Engineering Award for Forensic/Renovation/Retrofit/Rehabilitation Structures.[162]

The school announced the next phase of its work to enhance, elevate and expand the stadium experience in April, 2022. This includes a complete replacement of benches with individual seats; a construction of a new publicly accessible event facility adjacent to the Dome; and an upgrade of the entire digital infrastructure, including latest 5G technology and wireless connectivity.[163] The renovation of both phases, estimated to cost $165 million, is expected to be completed in 2024.

Future scheduled opponents Edit

Announced schedules as of February 7, 2020.[164]

2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037
Colgate Ohio vs Tennessee (in Atlanta, GA) New Hampshire at Penn State Penn State Morgan State at Notre Dame Notre Dame
Western Michigan at Army UConn at Army Notre Dame
at Purdue Holy Cross Army UConn
Army vs UConn at Notre Dame at Notre Dame UConn

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External links Edit

  • Official website  

syracuse, orange, football, team, represents, syracuse, university, sport, american, football, orange, compete, football, bowl, subdivision, national, collegiate, athletic, association, ncaa, atlantic, division, atlantic, coast, conference, syracuse, only, div. The Syracuse Orange football team represents Syracuse University in the sport of American football The Orange compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision FBS of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA and the Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC Syracuse is the only Division I FBS school in New York to compete in one of the Power Five conferences Syracuse Orange football2023 Syracuse Orange football teamFirst season1889 134 years ago 1889 Athletic directorJohn WildhackHead coachDino Babers 7th season 36 49 424 StadiumJMA Wireless Dome capacity 49 250 Year built1980Field surfaceFieldTurf 1 LocationSyracuse New YorkConferenceACC 2013 present DivisionAtlantic 2013 present Past conferencesBig East 1991 2012 Independent 1889 1990 All time record734 554 49 567 Bowl record16 10 1 611 Claimed national titles1 1959 Conference titles5 1996 1997 1998 2004 2012 RivalriesBoston College rivalry Pittsburgh rivalry West Virginia rivalry Penn State rivalry Colgate rivalry Heisman winnersErnie Davis 1961Consensus All Americans20 2 Current uniformColorsOrange 3 Fight songDown the FieldMascotOtto the OrangeMarching bandSyracuse University Marching BandWebsiteCuse footballThe Orange play their home games in the JMA Wireless Dome referred to as the JMA Dome on the university s campus in Syracuse New York 4 The stadium is also known as The Loud House Formed in 1889 the program has amassed over 700 wins and has achieved one consensus national championship in 1959 defeating the Texas Longhorns in that season s Cotton Bowl Syracuse has had 2 undefeated seasons 5 conference championships since 1991 and has produced a Heisman Trophy winner over 60 first team All Americans 18 Academic All Americans and over 240 NFL players 5 Syracuse has had 18 members inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame 2nd most in the ACC including former players Ernie Davis Tim Green Don McPherson Art Monk and former coaches Vic Hanson Ben Schwartzwalder and Dick MacPherson 6 The Orange boast 8 inductees in the Pro Football Hall Of Fame tied for the 4th most of any school including Jim Brown Marvin Harrison Larry Csonka and Floyd Little 7 The Orange have 27 bowl appearances 10 of which are among the New Year s Six Bowls Syracuse has finished in the Final Top 25 rankings 21 times in the national polls and finished in either the AP or Coaches Polls a combined 35 times since 1952 Syracuse has appeared in over 200 AP Polls including 7 weeks at AP number one Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1889 1948 1 2 Ben Schwartzwalder era 1949 1973 1 3 Frank Maloney era 1974 1980 1 4 Dick MacPherson era 1981 1990 1 5 Paul Pasqualoni era 1991 2004 1 6 Greg Robinson era 2005 2008 1 7 Doug Marrone era 2009 2012 1 8 Scott Shafer era 2013 2015 1 9 Dino Babers era 2016 present 2 Conference affiliations 3 Championships 3 1 National championships 3 2 Eastern and Conference championships 4 Head coaches 5 Traditions and legacy 5 1 Legend of 44 5 1 1 The Greatest 5 1 2 The Elmira Express 5 1 3 The Franchise 5 2 Pride of the Orange 6 Rivalries 6 1 Boston College 6 2 Pittsburgh 6 3 West Virginia 6 4 Penn State 6 5 Colgate 7 Uniforms 8 Bowl games 9 National polls 10 Individual award winners 10 1 Retired numbers 10 2 The 150 greatest players in college football s 150 year history 10 3 Heisman Trophy voting 10 4 National award winners 10 5 National coaching awards 10 6 Consensus All Americans 10 7 Eastern College Athletic Conference ECAC awards 10 8 Big East Conference awards 10 9 Big East Football 10th Anniversary honors 10 10 Atlantic Coast Conference awards 10 11 ACC All Conference selections 11 Hall of Fame 11 1 College Football Hall of Fame 11 2 Pro Football Hall of Fame 12 Orange in the National Football League 12 1 NFL All Time Team 12 2 NFL All Decade Teams 12 3 NFL Individual Awards 12 4 All Pro and Pro Bowls 13 Facilities 13 1 Archbold Stadium 13 2 The JMA Wireless Dome 14 Future scheduled opponents 15 References 16 External linksHistory EditSee also List of Syracuse Orange football seasons Early history 1889 1948 Edit Syracuse played its first football game on November 23 1889 8 9 and achieved its first success in the 1890s and 1900s With the construction of state of the art Archbold Stadium in 1907 Syracuse rose to national prominence under College Football Hall of Fame coach Frank Buck O Neill The 1915 squad garnered a Rose Bowl invitation that the school declined having already played on the West Coast that season In 1918 John Barsha born Abraham Barshofsky was co captain of the 1918 Walter Camp All America football team 10 nbsp Syracuse football player with Hall of Languages behind him c 1903 The 1920s had continued success with teams featuring two time All American Doc Alexander and star end Vic Hanson Vic Hanson was an American football player and coach basketball player and baseball player A three sport college athlete he played football basketball and baseball at Syracuse in the 1920s serving as team captain in all three sports The Watertown New York native was named a Basketball All American three times in 1925 1926 and 1927 was named the Helms Foundation College Basketball Player of the Year and was a consensus selection to both 1925 and 1926 College Football All America Teams Hanson is one of only two individuals who are members Amos Alonzo Stagg being the other of both the Basketball Hall of Fame and the College Football Hall of Fame and the only one inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame the College Basketball Hall of Fame and the College Football Hall of Fame He later coached the team from 1930 to 1936 In the 1930s Syracuse and nearby Cornell University were among the first collegiate football teams to include African American players as starting backfield players Wilmeth Sidat Singh was an African American basketball star player for DeWitt Clinton High School He received an offer of a basketball scholarship from Syracuse University and enrolled in 1935 While playing an intramural football game an assistant football coach noticed his talent and asked him to join the football team Sidat Singh starred for Syracuse playing a position equivalent to modern day quarterback In that era when games were played in Southern segregation states African American players from Northern schools were banned from the field Because of his light complexion and name Sidat Singh was sometimes assumed to be a Hindu as people from India were often called by Americans during this time However shortly before a game against Maryland a black sportswriter Sam Lacy wrote an article in the Baltimore Afro American revealing Sidat Singh s true racial identity Wilmeth Sidat Singh was held out of the game and Syracuse lost that game 0 13 Olympic track athlete Marty Glickman who played football for Syracuse believed athletic director Lew Andreas was a bigot who occasionally used a disparaging term for Blacks the 18 year old Glickman thought Andreas should have stood up for Sidat Singh Glickman also faulted himself for not standing up for Sidat Singh 11 In a rematch the following year at Syracuse Sidat Singh led the Orange to a lopsided victory 53 0 over Maryland In 2005 Syracuse University honored Wilmeth Sidat Singh by retiring his basketball jersey number 12 On Saturday Nov 9 2013 the University of Maryland publicly apologized to surviving relatives from the Webb family at a ceremony during a football game with Syracuse University 13 Ossie Solem coached at Syracuse from 1937 to 1945 During his tenure at Syracuse he tutored a young assistant coach named Bud Wilkinson who went on to lead the Oklahoma Sooners to win three national championships Ben Schwartzwalder era 1949 1973 Edit nbsp Ben Schwartzwalder and QB Dick Easterly December 5 1959 at UCLA The late 1930s and 1940s had a decline in fortunes that began to reverse when Ben Schwartzwalder took over as head coach in 1949 14 Syracuse made its first bowl appearance in the 1953 Orange Bowl 15 followed by appearances in the 1957 Cotton Bowl 16 and the 1959 Orange Bowl 17 Jim Brown a high school standout from Manhasset New York 18 19 considered to be one of the greatest running backs of all time as well as one of the greatest players in NFL history 20 was a consensus first team All American in 1956 finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting and set school records for highest season rush average 6 2 and most rushing touchdowns in a single game 6 In the Cotton Bowl he rushed for 132 yards scored three touchdowns and kicked three extra points but a blocked extra point after Syracuse s third touchdown was the difference as TCU won 28 27 21 In 1959 Syracuse earned its first consensus national championship finishing No 1 in both the AP and Coaches Polls following an undefeated season 11 0 and Cotton Bowl Classic victory over Texas The team featured sophomore running back Ernie Davis of Elmira New York who went on to become the first African American to win the Heisman Trophy in 1961 22 and All American tackle Ron Luciano who eventually become a prominent Major League Baseball umpire Davis was slated to play for the Cleveland Browns in the same backfield as Jim Brown but died of leukemia before being able to play professionally Syracuse remained competitive through the 1960s with a series of All American running backs including Floyd Little and Larry Csonka both inductees in the Pro Football Hall of Fame 23 24 Schwartzwalder produced 22 straight years of non losing football took the Orange to seven bowls won the Lambert Meadowlands Trophy to recognize the Eastern champion in Division I FBS four times 1952 1956 1959 1966 and won the national championship in 1959 He developed some of the most impressive running backs the game has ever seen Jim Brown Ernie Davis Jim Nance Floyd Little and Larry Csonka Orange teams outrushed opponents by more than 22 000 yards under Schwartzwalder He retired as Syracuse s head coach after the 1973 season which was Syracuse s third consecutive losing season 25 Schwartzwalder left Syracuse with a 153 91 3 record 26 In 1969 a group of nine African American student athletes boycotted Syracuse University s football program to demand change and promote racial equality Popularized erroneously in 1970 by the media as the Syracuse 8 the nine students behind the boycott were Gregory Allen Richard Bulls Dana Harrell John Godbolt John Lobon Clarence Bucky McGill A Alif Muhammad then known as Al Newton Duane Walker and Ron Womack 27 The student athletes drafted a list of four demands three of which were advocating for the betterment for all student athletes at the university were access to the same academic tutoring as their white teammates better medical care for all team members starting assignments based on merit and racially integrating the coaching staff which had been all white since 1898 28 nbsp RB Ernie Davis first African American to win the Heisman Trophy played at Syracuse from 1959 1961 nbsp RB Jim Brown Pro Football Hall of Famer played at Syracuse from 1954 1956 nbsp RB Larry Csonka Pro Football Hall of Famer played at Syracuse from 1965 1967Frank Maloney era 1974 1980 Edit Michigan assistant coach Frank Maloney was hired as Schwartzwalder s replacement 29 Maloney s tenure at Syracuse was marked by inconsistency 30 The fan base turned on him as the Orange failed to achieve the national status they had enjoyed under Schwartzwalder Maloney s program was also limited by archaic facilities 31 Archbold Stadium Syracuse s home field since 1907 was in need of replacement 31 Nonetheless Maloney did recruit a number of future NFL stars such as Joe Morris and Pro Football Hall of Fame member Art Monk 32 Maloney was the subject of criticism not only from the fans and alumni but also from the 1959 national championship team members of which started a campaign calling for his ouster 33 Ironically enough this call from program alumni came during the 1979 season Maloney s best at Syracuse when the Orangemen qualified for the Independence Bowl beating McNeese State After coaching the Orangemen for seven seasons and presiding over the opening of a new stadium the Carrier Dome renamed in 2022 the JMA Wireless Dome in 1980 Maloney resigned 34 nbsp Old Archbold Stadium in 1970sDick MacPherson era 1981 1990 Edit Dick MacPherson was hired as the head coach in 1981 35 and after several mediocre seasons fans wanted MacPherson fired coining the phrase Sack Mac 36 However the fans opinion of Coach MacPherson changed when the program returned suddenly to national prominence in 1987 with an undefeated 11 0 regular season record 37 The team featured Maxwell Award winning quarterback Don McPherson and fullback Daryl Johnston 38 The team missed an opportunity to play for the NCAA Division I A national football championship because both Oklahoma and Miami also finished undefeated that year and finished higher in the polls 39 Instead the team faced Southeastern Conference champion Auburn University in the Sugar Bowl 40 The game ended in a 16 16 tie when Auburn kicked a late field goal rather than trying for a game winning touchdown 41 MacPherson left Syracuse after the 1990 season to accept the position of head coach for the NFL s New England Patriots 42 McPherson is credited with building a strong recruiting pipeline in the northeast area 43 Paul Pasqualoni era 1991 2004 Edit Syracuse continued to experience success under MacPherson s successor Paul Pasqualoni previously the team s linebackers coach 44 appearing in 11 bowl games including three major bowls and winning 9 45 The team also captured or shared three Big East football championships during this period Prominent players of the period included Donovan McNabb Marvin Harrison Dwight Freeney Keith Bulluck Rob Moore Donovin Darius Qadry Ismail Kevin Johnson Rob Konrad Tebucky Jones and Marvin Graves 46 47 Rivalries shifted in the early 1990s as Penn State ended its series with Syracuse and joined the Big Ten 48 Syracuse meanwhile joined the newly formed Big East football conference with traditional rival West Virginia University and national power Miami 49 In 2004 Miami and Virginia Tech left the Big East to join the Atlantic Coast Conference 50 followed by Boston College in 2005 51 threatening the stature of the Big East Syracuse was originally invited to leave the Big East and join the ACC but under pressure from the Governor of Virginia the ACC decided to invite Virginia Tech to join the conference instead 52 Thus Syracuse remained in the Big East Syracuse s streak of winning seasons ended in 2002 when they went 4 8 53 This was followed by consecutive 6 6 seasons 54 55 Although they won a share of the Big East title in 2004 and competed in the Champs Sports Bowl 56 the teams from 2002 to 2004 were considered mediocre by Syracuse standards This prompted new athletic director Dr Daryl Gross to fire Pasqualoni after 14 years at the helm 57 Greg Robinson era 2005 2008 Edit nbsp Syracuse playing Buffalo in September 2005In 2005 the university hired Greg Robinson defensive coordinator for Texas as head coach 58 Robinson installed a new West Coast offense scheme replacing the option run style of offense previously run by Pasqualoni and new defensive schemes 59 The 2005 season started on a high note as Syracuse nearly upset eventual Big East and Sugar Bowl champion West Virginia forcing five turnovers in the 15 7 loss 60 They followed it up with a 31 0 thrashing of Buffalo 61 and another near upset this time against 25 Virginia falling 27 24 on a last second field goal 62 The squad lost its final eight games of the season Syracuse finished the year 1 10 the worst on field season in school history and won only 10 games with Robinson running the program 63 Robinson s Orange improved to 4 8 in 2006 64 but fell to 2 10 in 2007 65 The 2007 season included a road upset of number 18 Louisville 66 When the struggles continued in 2008 Syracuse fired Robinson 67 following a 3 9 season 68 where the high point was a 24 23 upset of Notre Dame 69 At the other end of the spectrum in a game that exemplified the Robinson era the Orange lost 55 13 to Penn State 70 Robinson s 213 winning percentage on the field is the worst for a non interim coach in school history He has been criticized for abandoning the traditional northeast recruiting pipeline 43 In 2015 Syracuse vacated all of its wins from 2005 and 2006 due to ineligible players dropping Robinson s official winning percentage to 119 Doug Marrone era 2009 2012 Edit nbsp Coach Doug Marrone and Hall of Fame RB Floyd Little during training camp at Fort Drum located in Jefferson County New YorkOn December 12 2008 Doug Marrone a Bronx New York native and former Orange player was announced as the replacement for Robinson as head coach 71 72 73 Marrone was the first Syracuse alumnus to serve as head football coach since Reaves H Baysinger in 1948 74 Reportedly alumni such as Tim Green and Floyd Little wanted Marrone from the moment the previous coach Greg Robinson was fired and when interviewed by Green Marrone was found to have kept a folder of current high school players in the Syracuse area to get a head start in recruiting 75 76 77 Improvement throughout the program was noticed immediately as the Orange despite only a marginal improvement in their win loss record going 4 8 under Marrone for his first year 78 played many much more closely including a 28 7 loss at number seven Penn State 79 In 2010 the Orange finished the regular season with a winning record for the first time since the 2001 season at 7 5 including road wins against number 19 West Virginia and two time defending conference champion Cincinnati 80 The team earned its first bowl bid since 2004 and along with second ranked Oregon and 10th ranked Boise State the five road wins were the best in 2010 of all FBS teams 81 December 30 2010 Syracuse defeated Kansas State in the inaugural Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium The game was televised live on ESPN 82 Two years later the Orange defeated West Virginia in the 2012 Pinstripe Bowl 83 On January 7 2013 Marrone left Syracuse accepting the head coaching position of the NFL s Buffalo Bills 84 Scott Shafer era 2013 2015 Edit The day after Marrone s departure Syracuse promoted defensive coordinator Scott Shafer to head coach 85 Coach Shafer s first season was marked by inconsistency from the team in spite of the bowl eligibility for the third time in four years Syracuse capped off the season with a 21 17 victory over Minnesota in the 2013 Texas Bowl to finish the year 7 6 86 87 The first season for the Orange in the ACC was 2013 88 The 2014 season brought about a noticeable drop in quality Syracuse finished the season a disappointing 3 9 89 In 2015 after they started the season 3 0 the Orange collapsed losing 8 of their final 9 games to finish the season 4 8 90 and on November 23 2015 it was announced that Shafer would be fired after the last game of the 2015 campaign 91 Dino Babers era 2016 present Edit nbsp JMA Dome crowd in 2022After an extensive coaching search Syracuse announced the hiring of Bowling Green head coach Dino Babers as the new Orange head football coach 92 Babers is the first African American head coach in school history 93 Babers brought with him an exciting up tempo offense he employed both as a head coach and as an assistant coach 94 In Babers first season in charge Syracuse started the year at 4 4 with the highlight of the first eight games being a 31 17 upset of number 17 Virginia Tech at home 95 Syracuse kept the momentum from the upset going and beat rival Boston College on the road 28 20 96 However they were blown out 54 0 in their next game by No 3 Clemson 97 In the final game of the season Syracuse lost to ACC rival Pittsburgh by a score of 76 61 98 The game was the highest scoring in FBS history with a combined score of 137 99 Syracuse finished 4 8 for the second consecutive year 100 In 2017 the Orange started 4 3 including a win over No 2 Clemson 101 but they lost their final five games to finish 4 8 for the third straight year 102 In 2018 Syracuse earned its first bowl bid under Babers going 10 3 with a bowl victory over West Virginia 103 In 2022 Syracuse started 6 0 earning a No 14 ranking in the AP and Coaches Polls However the team squandered a 21 10 halftime lead to Clemson falling 27 21 The Orange lost their next four games before finishing the season with a win at Boston College to end the year 7 5 104 Syracuse earned a trip to the Pinstripe Bowl where it lost to Minnesota 28 20 105 Conference affiliations EditSyracuse has been independent and affiliated with two conferences 106 Independent 1889 1990 Big East Conference 1991 2012 Atlantic Coast Conference 2013 present Championships EditNational championships Edit Syracuse finished their undefeated 1959 season with a 23 14 victory over the No 4 Texas Longhorns in the Cotton Bowl and were named the national champions by all major selectors including the major wire service AP and Coaches Poll 107 Year Coach Selectors Record Bowl Opponent Result Final AP Final Coaches1959 Ben Schwartzwalder AP Billingsley Boand DeVold Football News Football Research Football Writers Helms Litkenhous NCF NFF Poling Sagarin ELO Chess UPI Williamson 11 0 Cotton Bowl Texas W 23 14 No 1 No 1Eastern and Conference championships Edit For much of its history Syracuse played as an independent as did the majority of what are now labeled as Division I FBS football playing schools located in the Northeast and Mid Atlantic regions During this time Eastern Championships were named by independent third party selectors and awarded of various trophies The process of picking an Eastern Champion eventually came to be symbolized by the Lambert Meadowlands Trophy awarded by the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority beginning in 1936 As a result the Lambert Meadowlands Trophy voted on by a panel of sports writers in New York became the de facto conference championship for those schools 108 In 1991 the majority of football independents in the East including Syracuse aligned themselves together in the Big East Football Conference The Big East first crowned an official champion in 1993 In 2013 Syracuse joined the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC Year Coach Conference Overall record Conference record1952 Ben Schwartzwalder ECAC Lambert Meadowlands Trophy 7 3 1956 7 2 1959 11 0 1966 8 3 1987 Dick MacPherson 11 0 1 1992 Paul Pasqualoni 10 2 1996 Big East Conference 9 3 6 11997 9 4 6 11998 8 4 6 12004 6 6 4 22012 Doug Marrone 8 5 5 2 Co championsHead coaches Edit nbsp Frank Buck O Neill in 1901 nbsp Coach Paul Pasqualoni coached the Orange from 1991 to 2004There have been 30 head coaches at Syracuse 109 110 Dino Babers became the most recent head coach in 2016 College Football Hall of Fame inducteeTenure Coach Years Record Pct 1890 Robert Winston 1 7 4 6361891 William Galbraith 1 4 6 4001892 Jordan C Wells 1 0 8 1 0561894 George H Bond 1 6 5 5451895 1896 George O Redington 2 11 5 4 6501897 1899 Frank E Wade 3 17 9 2 6431900 1902 Edwin R Sweetland 3 20 5 2 7781903 Jason B Parish amp Ancil D Brown 1 5 4 5561904 1905 Charles P Hutchins 2 14 6 7001906 1907 1913 19151917 1919 Frank Buck O Neill 8 52 19 6 7141908 Howard Jones 1 6 3 1 6501909 1910 Tad Jones 2 9 9 2 5001911 1912 C DeForest Cummings 2 9 8 2 5261913 Bill Hollenback 1 5 4 5561920 1924 Chick Meehan 5 35 8 4 7871925 1926 Pete Reynolds 2 15 3 2 8001927 1929 Lew Andreas 3 15 10 3 5891930 1936 Vic Hanson 7 33 21 5 6021937 1942 1944 1945 Ossie Solem 8 30 27 6 5241946 Clarence Munn 1 4 5 4441947 1948 Reaves Baysinger 2 4 14 2861949 1973 Ben Schwartzwalder 25 153 91 3 6261974 1980 Frank Maloney 7 32 46 4101981 1990 Dick MacPherson 10 66 46 4 5861991 2004 Paul Pasqualoni 14 107 59 1 6442005 2008 Greg Robinson 4 10 37 2132009 2012 Doug Marrone 4 25 25 5002013 2015 Scott Shafer 3 14 23 3782016 present Dino Babers 7 36 49 424Traditions and legacy EditLegend of 44 Edit The No 44 at Syracuse is one of the most legendary numbers ever associated with a college football program Like tailbacks at USC or quarterbacks at Purdue the running back position at Syracuse has a rich tradition of greatness Much of that greatness has revolved around one jersey number 44 Syracuse University officially retired 44 on Saturday November 12 2005 Since 1954 11 players have worn the number and three of the most famous 44s Jim Brown Ernie Davis and Floyd Little are in the College Football Hall of Fame The Greatest Edit Main article Jim Brown nbsp Jim Brown 57 Pro Football Hall of Fame and College Football Hall of Fame tailbackJim Brown played at SU from 1954 to 1956 Brown earned numerous honors as Orange playing college football basketball track and field and lacrosse In his senior year in 1956 Brown was a consensus first team All American and led the team to a Cotton Bowl He finished 5th in the Heisman Trophy voting and set school records for highest season rush average 6 2 most rushing touchdowns in a single game 6 and an NCAA single game record of 43 points 111 After his successful college career Brown went on to become one of the greatest football players of all time 112 Jim Brown was an All Pro and a Pro Bowl invitee every season he was in the league was recognized as the AP NFL Most Valuable Player three times and won an NFL championship with the Browns in 1964 He led the league in rushing yards in eight out of his nine seasons and by the time he retired he had shattered most major rushing records Brown s memorable professional career led to his induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1971 His football accomplishments at Syracuse garnered him a berth in the College Football Hall of Fame Jim Brown also earned a spot in the Lacrosse Hall of Fame giving him a rare triple crown of sorts Today he is recognized as the greatest football player ever 113 by most professional football writers 114 But Brown s legacy goes beyond sports Brown was one of the NFL s earliest social issues activists along with a group of top African American athletes from different sporting disciplines such as Bill Russell Muhammad Ali and Kareem Abdul Jabbar In the 1960s Brown co founded the Black Economic Union to support the growth of black owned businesses In the 1980s he also started the Amer I Can program which mentors youth in both inner cities and prisons The Elmira Express Edit Main article Ernie Davis nbsp Plaque on statue of Ernie Davis Ernie Davis Academy Elmira New YorkErnie Davis the only Orange player to win the Heisman Trophy played at Syracuse from 1959 to 1961 and went on to national fame in each of those three seasons winning first team All American honors twice Davis led the 1959 Syracuse team to a national championship capping an 11 0 season with a 23 14 win over the Texas Longhorns in the 1960 Cotton Bowl Classic where Davis was named Most Valuable Player That same season Elmira Star Gazette sports writer Al Mallette coined the nickname for Davis the Elmira Express During his Cotton Bowl visit to host city Dallas Texas Ernie and his black teammates found discrimination prevalent in the American South Author Jocelyn Selim writes that at the banquet following the 1960 game Davis was told he could only accept his award and then would be required to leave the segregated facility when the doors were opened to the public for a dance Despite the racial issues Davis became the first black athlete to be awarded the Heisman Trophy the highest individual honor in collegiate football and he also won the Walter Camp Memorial Trophy following his 1961 season at Syracuse University President John F Kennedy had followed Davis career and requested to meet him while he was in New York to receive the trophy Later in 1963 when Elmira chose February 3 to celebrate Davis achievements Kennedy sent a telegram reading Seldom has an athlete been more deserving of such a tribute Your high standards of performance on the field and off the field reflect the finest qualities of competition sportsmanship and citizenship The nation has bestowed upon you its highest awards for your athletic achievements It s a privilege for me to address you tonight as an outstanding American and as a worthy example of our youth I salute you 115 Davis was the number one pick in the 1962 NFL Draft He was bound to go to the Cleveland Browns where he would be teammates with Jim Brown Davis signed a three year contract with the Browns in late December 1961 It was the most lucrative contract for an NFL rookie up to that time 116 However Davis dream of pairing with Jim Brown took a tragic turn when Davis was diagnosed with leukemia The disease was incurable and Davis died at age 23 at Cleveland Lakeside Hospital on May 18 1963 117 Following his death the Browns retired his number 45 jersey A motion picture biography The Express The Ernie Davis Story directed by Gary Fleder and based on the non fiction book The Elmira Express the Story of Ernie Davis by Robert C Gallagher began production in April 2007 118 and was released on October 10 2008 His commemorative statue now stands in front of the school named in his honor Ernie Davis Academy Another statue of Davis stands on the campus of Syracuse University near the steps of Hendricks Chapel and the Shaw Quad where pre game pep rallies are held He was inducted to the College Football Hall of Fame in the fall of 1979 The Franchise Edit nbsp Floyd LittleMain article Floyd LittleFloyd Little played for Syracuse from 1964 to 1966 He is the only three time All American running back to compete for the Syracuse University Orangemen He finished 5th in Heisman Trophy voting in both 1965 and 1966 Floyd was the leading force behind teams that earned tickets to the Sugar Bowl in 1964 and the Gator Bowl in 1966 teaming with another great tailback Larry Csonka in the latter In addition to breaking the running records of Brown and Davis Little became the greatest kick returner in Orange history He led the country in all purpose yardage averaging 199 yards per game in 1965 119 Floyd Little was the first ever first round draft pick to sign with the American Football League s Denver Broncos During his rookie year Little led the NFL in punt returns with a 16 9 yard average He led the NFL in combined yards in 1967 and 1968 and was the first ever Bronco to win a rushing title leading the AFC in rushing in 1970 and the following year he became the first Bronco to eclipse 1 000 yards gaining 1 133 to lead the NFL 120 Little was Denver Broncos team captain all 9 seasons including his rookie season and he was known as The Franchise Floyd Little retired as the NFL s 7th all time leading rusher with 6 323 yards He later was inducted both in the College and Pro Football Hall of Fame To honor his achievements Denver Broncos retired his 44 jersey Statues of Davis second on campus Brown and Little are at Syracuse University s Plaza 44 commemorating the number the running backs wore while playing football No 44 has become so associated with Syracuse that the university s ZIP code 13244 was requested by university officials to remember those who wore 44 for the Orange Number 44 not only has come to represent greatness on the football field it has become a part of the university s and the community s identity 119 Pride of the Orange Edit nbsp Syracuse band performing at Super Bowl XLVIII The Syracuse University Marching Band SUMB also known as the Pride of the Orange is the collegiate marching band of Syracuse University The SUMB performs at all home football games throughout the season and also makes several local parades and other performances throughout the year It is one of the largest student organizations at Syracuse University consisting of approximately 200 members Founded in 1901 it is one of the oldest collegiate bands in the nation Over the course of almost 120 years the Pride of the Orange has played a huge role in University history and has been a constant source of pride for the University 121 Cuse on the Quad Starting three hours prior to Syracuse football home games fans attend the social meeting children s playground food and beverages garden areas organized by the University located directly on the Quad the center of the campus Fans can watch College Game Day or the top college football games streaming live on ESPN under the tents Fans can also take in the sights and sounds of local DJs live music and the Syracuse University Marching Band which performs on the steps of Hendrick s Chapel about an hour before kickoff Down the Field The band has first officially performed at a football game in 1925 122 Over the decades after every touchdown scored by the Orange the SUMB plays the Syracuse University fight song Down the Field 1914 written by Ralph Murphy Class of 1916 and composed by C Harold Lewis Class of 1915 Win or lose the Alma Mater is played by the band after every football game The team will gather in the end zone with the cheerleaders and Otto and sing the song Students and fans often wrap their arms around the shoulders of those standing next to them and sway side to side Flip the Banner at Varsity Varsity a pizza shop just outside the campus has been passed down for three generations since 1926 The Varsity has been an integral part of SU sports culture for decades The Orange schedule is displayed with banners hanging on the walls of the restaurant After victories the Pride of the Orange goes to Varsity and will play their sets inside the restaurant After the band plays the banner of the opposing team will be flipped upside down to symbolize the victory For the entire season the banners will tell the tale of Syracuse s season Rivalries EditBoston College Edit Main article Boston College Syracuse football rivalry The two schools first met on October 18 1924 a 10 0 win for the Syracuse Orange 123 The Eagles and the Orange began playing an annual game in 1961 To date Boston College and Syracuse have played each other 46 times 124 Aside from Holy Cross no team has played Boston College more than Syracuse In 2004 the Eagles last year in the Big East the Orange pulled off a surprising upset that kept the Eagles from going to their first BCS game BC s departure from the Big East put the future of the rivalry in doubt Syracuse s admission into the ACC in 2013 resurrected the rivalry with the two teams playing each another annually as members of the ACC s Atlantic Division Syracuse leads the series 31 20 through the 2018 season 125 Pittsburgh Edit Main article Pittsburgh Syracuse football rivalry The rivalry with fellow ACC conference member Pittsburgh began in 1916 and has been played annually since 1955 The Panthers and Orange were both Eastern football independents for most of their history but have shared the same football conference since 1991 when the Big East Football Conference was formed from Eastern football independents Pitt is tied as the most played opponent for Syracuse and Syracuse is the third most played opponent for Pitt Sharing membership in the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC since 2013 the Panthers and Orange have played a total of 74 times Pittsburgh leads the series 39 31 3 through the 2018 season 126 West Virginia Edit Main article Syracuse West Virginia football rivalry Syracuse and West Virginia have played 60 times Often these games have had a bearing on which collegiate program was the best in the East In much of the 80s and 90s Syracuse and West Virginia made for one of the Big East s best head to head match ups on a yearly basis West Virginia then left the Big East for the Big 12 Conference in 2012 127 The Ben Schwartzwalder Trophy goes to the winner of the West Virginia and Syracuse football game The trophy was introduced in 1993 and is named after former WVU football player and Syracuse head coach Ben Schwartzwalder who had died in March of that year 128 The trophy weighs 55 pounds and was sculpted by Syracuse player Jim Ridlon West Virginia won the first trophy game at Syracuse and has gone on to win 11 129 Syracuse has won the trophy eight times and currently holds it 130 Syracuse leads the series 34 27 with the last two games played in 2012 Pinstripe Bowl and 2018 Camping World Bowl 131 Syracuse is currently on the 4 game winning streak Penn State Edit Main article Penn State Syracuse football rivalry The heyday of the Syracuse Penn State rivalry took place during the 1950s and 1960s when the teams battled back and forth in a competitive and often controversial string of contests Syracuse football was led by legendary coach Ben Schwartzwalder and Penn State by Rip Engle from 1950 to 1966 and Joe Paterno from 1967 to 2011 From 1950 to 1970 Syracuse won 11 to Penn State s 10 games Unfortunately conference realignment and scheduling disagreements have dampened the intensity of the rivalry between the teams in recent years The teams first met on October 28 1922 at the New York Polo Grounds battling to a scoreless citation needed tie kick starting an East coast rivalry that has seen 71 total match ups with the teams meeting almost every season from 1922 to 1990 The only exception was during the 1943 season when Syracuse did not field team in light of World War II citation needed From 1922 to 1940 Syracuse held a 10 4 4 advantage over the Nittany Lions before Penn State would win 8 straight from 1941 to 1949 In the 1947 match up Penn State prevailed 40 0 in State College behind a staunch defense that held the Orange to 47 total yards which is an NCAA record 107 rushing 60 passing in 49 plays 132 From 1956 to 1966 the Orange regained command winning 8 out of 11 Since 1967 the Nittany Lions have dominated winning 24 of 27 match ups including 16 straight from 1971 to 1986 In 1987 Dick MacPherson coached Syracuse to a 48 21 victory over the Nittany Lions in the JMA Wireless Dome Syracuse won again the following year at Penn State but lost the final two games before the suspension of the series in 1991 133 Penn State leads the all time series 43 23 5 and have won 5 straight The most recent match up was played at Metlife Stadium in East Rutherford NJ a 23 17 win for Penn State 134 The teams do not have any future match ups scheduled Colgate Edit Main article Colgate Syracuse football rivalry For many years Syracuse s main football rivals were the nearby Colgate Red Raiders Colgate and Syracuse first played each other in football in 1891 with Colgate recording a 22 16 victory The Red Raiders would go on the win 12 of the first 16 games in the series Colgate s early dominance in the series quickly gave rise to the legend of the Hoodoo a play on a corruption of the word Voodoo The schools have played each other a total of 67 times with the series tied at 31 31 5 By the late 1950s Syracuse had established itself as a major power in Eastern college football and the games became increasingly one sided Following the 1961 contest Colgate terminated the series in order to focus on playing smaller peer institutions Following the NCAA s I A I AA split in 1978 the rivalry was intermittently renewed in the 1980s with Syracuse comfortably winning all three games played in the decade In 2010 the rivalry was renewed again after a 23 year absence with Syracuse recording a 42 7 victory 135 136 The series resumed again in 2016 when Syracuse hosted Colgate in a game played in the JMA Wireless Dome 137 which Syracuse won 33 7 Uniforms Edit nbsp Syracuse helmet design history nbsp Current helmets worn by the OrangeSyracuse University adopted orange color as its official color in 1890 The color was selected after a vote by students alumni faculty and trustees who noted it was a strong bright color not claimed by any other school Syracuse University was the first school to adopt only one primary color It was chosen to represent the golden apples of Hesperia as well as the story of the sunrise and hope for a golden future 138 The first uniforms of the Orange were classic white sweaters and dark pants Syracuse football wore these from 1889 to 1919 Orange color was first worn in the 1920s A blue number was stitched on the back of orange jerseys and the dark pants were replaced with Khaki moleskin Blue began to be generally recognized as a secondary color of Syracuse 139 During its glory years beginning with the first bowl game appearance in 1952 Syracuse football used to wear white jerseys and orange pants at home at Archbold stadium From 1952 to 1966 coach Ben Schwartzwalder with his military background and always looking for an edge thought white jerseys made his players look bigger faster and stronger During his first three seasons 1949 51 and in 1958 he also experimented with an all orange look to camouflage the football 140 Blue jerseys were rarely seen during that era as Syracuse wore them only three times The switch to blue and orange combination at home came in 1967 Since then it was blue jersey and orange pants at home until the first three Frank Maloney seasons 1974 76 when the newly assigned coach wanted to move away from the Schwartzwalder era with orange jerseys and unusually designed white helmets before bringing blue jerseys and orange helmets back for essentially the next 28 seasons Syracuse started wearing white jerseys and orange jerseys and pants at home again in the 2000s Three colors orange white and blue have been used in several combinations throughout the years Bowl games EditSee also List of Syracuse Orange bowl games Since the establishment of the team in 1890 Syracuse has appeared in 27 bowl games Included in these games are 10 combined appearances in the New Year s Six bowl games the Rose Sugar Cotton Orange Fiesta and Peach and 1 Bowl Championship Series BCS game appearances The New Year s Six represent six of the ten oldest bowl games played at the FBS level missing the Sun Gator Citrus and Liberty bowls continuing their original history of putting the very best teams in the country against each other Syracuse s all time bowl record is 16 wins 10 losses and 1 tie 16 10 1 Syracuse Orange Bowl Games Bowl Score Date Season Opponent Stadium Attendance Head coach1 Orange Bowl L 6 61 January 1 1953 1952 Alabama Orange Bowl 66 280 Ben Schwartzwalder2 Cotton Bowl Classic L 27 28 January 1 1957 1956 TCU Cotton Bowl 61 500 Ben Schwartzwalder3 Orange Bowl L 6 21 January 1 1959 1958 Oklahoma Orange Bowl 75 281 Ben Schwartzwalder4 Cotton Bowl Classic W 23 14 January 1 1960 1959 Texas Cotton Bowl 75 500 Ben Schwartzwalder5 Liberty Bowl W 15 14 December 16 1961 1961 Miami Philadelphia Municipal Stadium 15 712 Ben Schwartzwalder6 Sugar Bowl L 10 13 January 1 1965 1964 LSU Tulane Stadium 65 000 Ben Schwartzwalder7 Gator Bowl L 12 18 December 31 1966 1966 Tennessee Gator Bowl Stadium 60 312 Ben Schwartzwalder8 Independence Bowl W 31 7 December 15 1979 1979 McNeese State Independence Stadium 27 234 Frank Maloney9 Cherry Bowl L 18 35 December 21 1985 1985 Maryland Pontiac Silverdome 51 858 Dick MacPherson10 Sugar Bowl T 16 16 January 1 1988 1987 Auburn Louisiana Superdome 75 495 Dick MacPherson11 Hall of Fame Bowl W 23 10 January 1 1989 1988 LSU Tampa Stadium 51 112 Dick MacPherson12 Peach Bowl W 19 18 December 30 1989 1989 Georgia Atlanta Fulton County Stadium 44 991 Dick MacPherson13 Aloha Bowl W 28 0 December 25 1990 1990 Arizona Aloha Stadium 14 185 Dick MacPherson14 Hall of Fame Bowl W 24 17 January 1 1992 1991 Ohio State Tampa Stadium 57 789 Paul Pasqualoni15 Fiesta Bowl W 26 22 January 1 1993 1992 Colorado Sun Devil Stadium 70 224 Paul Pasqualoni16 Gator Bowl W 41 0 January 1 1996 1995 Clemson Jacksonville Municipal Stadium 45 202 Paul Pasqualoni17 Liberty Bowl W 30 17 December 27 1996 1996 Houston Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium 49 163 Paul Pasqualoni18 Fiesta Bowl L 18 35 December 31 1997 1997 Kansas State Sun Devil Stadium 69 367 Paul Pasqualoni19 Orange Bowl L 10 31 January 2 1999 1998 Florida Orange Bowl 67 919 Paul Pasqualoni20 Music City Bowl W 20 13 December 29 1999 1999 Kentucky Adelphia Coliseum 59 221 Paul Pasqualoni21 Insight com Bowl W 26 3 December 29 2001 2001 Kansas State Bank One Ballpark 40 028 Paul Pasqualoni22 Champs Sports Bowl L 14 51 December 21 2004 2004 Georgia Tech Citrus Bowl 28 237 Paul Pasqualoni23 Pinstripe Bowl W 36 34 December 30 2010 2010 Kansas State Yankee Stadium 38 274 Doug Marrone24 Pinstripe Bowl W 38 14 December 29 2012 2012 West Virginia Yankee Stadium 39 098 Doug Marrone25 Texas Bowl W 21 17 December 27 2013 2013 Minnesota Reliant Stadium 32 327 Scott Shafer26 Camping World Bowl W 34 18 December 28 2018 2018 West Virginia Camping World Stadium 41 125 Dino Babers27 Pinstripe Bowl L 20 28 December 29 2022 2022 Minnesota Yankee Stadium 31 131 Dino BabersNational polls EditSyracuse has finished in the Final Top 25 rankings 21 times in the national polls and finished in either the AP or Coaches Polls a combined 35 times since 1952 Syracuse has appeared in over 200 AP Polls including 7 weeks at AP No 1 141 Syracuse Final RankingsYear Record AP Poll Coaches 1952 7 3 14 1956 7 2 8 81958 8 2 9 101959 11 0 1 11960 7 2 19 1961 8 3 14 161963 8 2 121964 7 4 121966 8 3 161967 8 2 121987 11 0 1 4 41988 10 2 13 12 Year Record AP Poll Coaches 1990 7 4 2 211991 10 2 11 111992 10 2 6 71995 9 3 19 161996 9 3 22 191997 9 4 21 201998 8 4 25 242001 10 3 14 142018 10 3 15 15 AP Poll began selecting the nation s Top 20 teams in 1936 Only the Top 10 teams were recognized from 1962 to 1967 The AP Poll expanded back to the Top 20 teams in 1968 In 1989 it began recognizing the Top 25 teams UPI Coaches Poll began selecting its Top 20 teams on a weekly basis in 1950 before expanding to the nations s Top 25 teams in 1990 Individual award winners EditSee also Syracuse Orange football statistical leaders Retired numbers Edit See also List of NCAA football retired numbers Syracuse University retired six jersey numbers and hung them in the JMA Wireless Dome rafters 142 Syracuse Orange football retired numbers nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Donovan McNabb1995 1998 Don McPherson1984 1987 Larry Csonka1965 1967 25 players 1 1921 1998 Joe Morris1978 1981 Tim Green1982 1986 John Mackey1960 1962Notes1 The complete list of players who wore number 44 by chronological order Gifford Zimmerman Charles Roberts Clarence Taylor Don Baldwin Richard Fishel Henry Merz Hamilton Watt Francis Mullins Stanley Stanislay Benjamin DeYoung Francis Mazejko Richard Ransom J O Brien Robert Eberling Jim Brown Thomas Stephens Ernie Davis William Schoonover Floyd Little Richard Panczyszyn Mandel Robinson Glenn Moore Michael Owens Terry Richardson and Rob Konrad The 150 greatest players in college football s 150 year history Edit Jim Brown is named as the greatest player in college football history ESPN unveiled college football s 150 greatest players of the first 150 years of history of college football ESPN s top 150 players were determined by a blue ribbon panel of current and former writers broadcasters administrators sports information directors and ESPN personalities 143 144 Rank Name Pos Years1 Jim Brown RB 1954 5615 Ernie Davis RB 1959 6152 Floyd Little RB 1964 66Heisman Trophy voting Edit Name Pos Year PlaceDwight Freeney DE 2001 9thDonovan McNabb QB 1998 5thDon McPherson QB 1987 2ndLarry Csonka FB 1967 4thFloyd Little RB 1966 5thFloyd Little RB 1965 5thErnie Davis RB 1961 1stJim Brown HB 1956 5thNational award winners Edit See also National College Football Awards Association Heisman TrophyBest player1961 Ernie DavisWalter Camp TrophyBest player1961 Ernie DavisMaxwell AwardBest player1987 Don McPhersonWalter Camp All Century TeamBest player of the century2000 Jim BrownWalter Camp Man of the YearMan of the Year1978 Floyd LittleWalter CampAlumni of the YearDistinction in excellence as an athlete2000 Don McPherson Chic Harley AwardCollege Football Player1961 Ernie DavisBronko Nagurski TrophyBest defensive player2001 Dwight Freeney Chuck Bednarik AwardBest defensive player2001 Dwight Freeney Davey O Brien AwardBest quarterback1987 Don McPherson1993 Marvin Graves Johnny Unitas Golden Arm AwardBest senior quarterback1987 Don McPherson1993 Marvin Graves 1998 Donovan McNabb Sammy Baugh TrophyBest quarterback1987 Don McPherson Jim Thorpe AwardBest defensive back1987 Markus Paul 1988 Markus Paul Lombardi AwardBest lineman or linebacker1984 Tim Green 1985 Tim Green 1987 Ted Gregory 2001 Dwight Freeney Lou Groza AwardBest kicker2018 Andre SzmytVlade AwardMost accurate placekicker2018 Andre SzmytWalter CampDistinguished American AwardGreat success in business or public service2011 Floyd Little NFF Distinguished American AwardExcellence in scholarship citizenship leadership1982 Jim BrownSilver Anniversary AwardsAchievement in life1982 Jim Brown1992 Floyd Little2011 Tim GreenAFCA Good Works TeamAccomplishments off the field2000 Kyle Johnson2001 Graham Manley2004 Matt Tarulo2014 Sam Rodgers2018 Kielan WhitnerAcademic All AmericaHall of FameOutstanding collegiate scholar athletes2006 Tim Green Finalist National coaching awards Edit See also Category College football coach of the year awards in the United States AFCA Coach of the YearBest head coach1959 Ben Schwartzwalder1987 Dick MacPhersonWalter Camp Coach of the YearBest head coach1987 Dick MacPherson Sporting News College FootballCoach of the YearBest head coach1987 Dick MacPhersonEddie Robinson Coach of the YearBest head coach1959 Ben Schwartzwalder1987 Dick MacPherson Woody Hayes TrophyBest head coach1987 Dick MacPhersonBobby Dodd Coach of the YearBest head coach1987 Dick MacPhersonPaul Bear Bryant AwardBest coach1987 Dick MacPherson Walter Camp Man of the YearMan of the Year1973 Duffy DaughertyAmos Alonzo Stagg AwardOutstanding services in the advancementof the best interests of football1970 Pappy Waldorf1977 Ben Schwartzwalder1985 Duffy DaughertyConsensus All Americans Edit See also College Football All America Team Syracuse football players have earned All America honors over 130 times since 1908 Among those selections 20 have achieved Consensus All American status Of those consensus All Americans 9 are unanimous selections Below is the list of first team All Americans named by major selectors nbsp Larry Csonka nbsp Dwight FreeneyAll America team selectionsSeason Name Pos 1908 Frank Bill Horr T1908 Claude Fisher E1915 Harold White G1915 Red Wilkinson HB1915 Chris Schlachter G1917 Chris Schlachter G1917 Alfred Cobb T1918 Lou Usher G1918 Willard Ackley QB1918 Doc Alexander G1919 Doc Alexander G1920 Doc Alexander G1920 Bertrand Gulick T1923 Pete MacRae E1924 Pappy Waldorf T1924 Jack McBride B1926 Vic Hanson E1930 George A Ellert E1934 Jim Steen T1952 Bob Fleck G1953 Bob Fleck G1955 Jim Brown HB1956 Jim Brown HB1958 Ron Luciano T1959 Roger Davis G Season Name Pos 1959 Robert Yates T1959 Fred Mautino E1960 Ernie Davis HB1961 Ernie Davis HB1964 Pat Killorin C1964 Floyd Little RB1965 Floyd Little RB1965 Pat Killorin C1965 Charlie Brown DB1966 Floyd Little RB1966 Gary Bugenhagen G1966 Larry Csonka FB1967 Larry Csonka FB1968 Tony Kyasky DB1968 Art Thoms DL1970 Joe Ehrmann DL1971 Tom Myers DB1975 Ray Preston LB1978 Joe Morris RB1979 Art Monk WR1981 Gary Anderson K1982 Mike Charles DL1984 Tim Green DL1985 Tim Green DL1987 Ted Gregory DL Season Name Pos 1987 Don McPherson QB1988 Markus Paul DB1989 Rob Moore WR1989 John Flannery C1990 John Flannery C1991 Qadry Ismail KR1992 Chris Gedney TE1992 Marvin Graves QB1995 Marvin Harrison AP1995 Kevin Abrams DB1996 Kevin Abrams DB1996 Antwaune Ponds LB1997 Donovin Darius S1997 Quinton Spotwood KR1997 Donovan McNabb QB1998 Kevin Johnson KR1999 Keith Bulluck LB2001 Dwight Freeney DE2008 Tony Fiammetta FB2009 Chandler Jones DE2012 Ryan Nassib QB2017 Steve Ishmael WR2018 Andre Szmyt K2018 Andre Cisco S2021 Sean Tucker RB Consensus All Americans Unanimous All AmericansEastern College Athletic Conference ECAC awards Edit See also Eastern College Athletic Conference ECAC Player of the Year1966 Floyd Little1967 Larry Csonka1987 Don McPherson ECAC Offensive Player of the Year1979 Bill Hurley1980 Joe Morris ECAC Defensive Player of the Year1985 Tim GreenECAC Rookie of the Year1990 Marvin GravesBig East Conference awards Edit See also Big East Conference football individual awards Offensive Player of the Year1996 Donovan McNabb1997 Donovan McNabb1998 Donovan McNabbECAC Coach of the Year1992 Paul Pasqualoni1995 Paul Pasqualoni1996 Paul Pasqualoni Defensive Player of the Year1991 George Rooks1997 Donovin Darius2001 Dwight FreeneyAFCA RegionalCoach of the Year2010 Doug Marrone Rookie of the Year1995 Donovin DariusSpecial Teams Player of the Year1992 John Biskup1993 Pat O Neil1995 Marvin Harrison1997 Quinton Spotwood1998 Kevin Johnson ECAC Rookie of the Year1994 Antwaune Ponds1995 Donovan McNabb2011 Dyshawn DavisScholar Athlete of the Year2001 Kyle Johnson2012 Ryan NassibBig East Football 10th Anniversary honors Edit The best players of the decade and the team which includes 29 players was selected by Big East media members to celebrate the 10th year of Big East football 145 Offensive Player of the DecadeQB Donovan McNabbSpecial Teams Player of the DecadeKR WR Kevin Johnson Big East Team of the DecadeQB Donovan McNabbWR Marvin HarrisonKR Kevin JohnsonCB Kevin AbramsS Donovin DariusAtlantic Coast Conference awards Edit See also Atlantic Coast Conference football individual awards AP ACC Coach of the Year2018 Dino Babers ECAC Coach of the Year2018 Dino Babers Defensive Rookie of the Year2018 Andre CiscoBrian Piccolo Award2020 Nolan CooneyJim Tatum Award2020 Kingsley Jonathan ECAC Offensive Player of the Year2018 Eric DungeyECAC Defensive Rookie of the Year2018 Andre CiscoECAC Rookie of the Year2021 Duce Chestnut co winner ACC All Conference selections Edit Syracuse football players in All ACC teams since 2013 All ACC team selectionsSeason Name Pos 2013 Macky MacPherson C2013 Jerome Smith RB2013 Durell Eskridge S2013 Jay Bromley DT2014 Sean Hickey T2014 Cameron Lynch LB2015 Riley Dixon P2015 Ron Thompson DE2015 Brisly Estime APB2016 Amba Etta Tawo WR2016 Zaire Franklin LB2016 Brisly Estime APB2016 Sterling Hofrichter P2017 Steve Ishmael WR Season Name Pos 2017 Ervin Philips WR2017 Parris Bennett LB2017 Cole Murphy K2018 Sean Riley APB2018 Andre Szmyt K2018 Sterling Hofrichter P2018 Jamal Custis WR2018 Alton Robinson DE2018 Andre Cisco S2018 Ryan Guthrie LB2018 Eric Dungey QB2018 Koda Martin T2019 Sterling Hofrichter P2019 Trishton Jackson WR Season Name Pos 2019 Andre Cisco S2019 Lakiem Williams LB2019 Andre Szmyt K2020 Nykeim Johnson KR2020 Taj Harris WR2020 Nolan Cooney P2020 Ifeatu Melifonwu CB2021 Duce Chestnut CB2021 Cody Roscoe DE2021 Sean Tucker RB2021 Mikel Jones LB2022 Mikel Jones LB2022 Sean Tucker RB2022 Sean Tucker APB Season Name Pos 2022 Matthew Bergeron T2022 Oronde Gadsden II WR 1st All ACCHall of Fame EditSee also Syracuse Football All Century Team nbsp QB Donovan McNabb at the 1999 NFL Draft nbsp Marvin Harrison Hall of Fame WRCollege Football Hall of Fame Edit See also College Football Hall of FameSyracuse is one of the most represented schools in the National Football Foundation s College Hall of Fame The Orange have 18 enshrinees second most among ACC programs behind Pittsburgh 25 Syracuse has had 11 players and 7 former coaches inducted into the Hall of Fame 146 Name Pos Years InductedFrank Buck O Neill HC 1906 07 1913 15 1917 19 1936 1951Howard Jones HC 1908 1951Joe Alexander G 1917 1920 1954Tad Jones HC 1909 1910 1958Biggie Munn HC 1946 1959Lynn Pappy Waldorf T 1922 1924 1966Bud Wilkinson HC 1938 41 1969Jim Brown HB 1954 1956 1971Vic Hanson E HC 1924 26 1928 36 1973Ernie Davis HB 1959 1961 1979Ben Schwartzwalder HC 1949 1973 1982Floyd Little RB 1964 1966 1983Hugh Duffy Daugherty G HC 1937 39 1940 1946 1984Larry Csonka FB 1965 1967 1989Tim Green DT 1982 1985 2002Don McPherson QB 1984 1987 2008Dick MacPherson HC 1980 1990 2009Art Monk WR 1976 1979 2012Dwight Freeney DE 1998 2001 2023Pro Football Hall of Fame Edit nbsp Art Monk Hall of Fame WRSee also Pro Football Hall of FameSyracuse s legacy in the Pro Football Hall of Fame ranks among the finest of any college football program The Orange boast eight inductees tied for the eight most of any school Only Notre Dame 13 USC 13 Michigan 11 Ohio State 10 Miami 9 and Pittsburgh 9 have more representatives in the Pro Football Hall of Fame than Syracuse 147 Name Team Years Position InductedJim Brown Cleveland Browns 1957 65 HB 1971Jim Ringo Green Bay Packers 1953 63 C 1981Larry Csonka Miami Dolphins 1968 74 1979 FB 1987John Mackey Baltimore Colts 1963 71 TE 1992Al Davis Oakland Raiders 1963 2011 Owner GM Commissioner 1992Art Monk Washington Redskins 1980 93 WR 2008Floyd Little Denver Broncos 1967 75 RB 2010Marvin Harrison Indianapolis Colts 1996 2008 WR 2016Orange in the National Football League EditNFL All Time Team Edit See also National Football League 100th Anniversary All Time Team The National Football League 100th Anniversary All Time Team was revealed in 2019 after being voted on by a panel consisting of media members former players and league personnel It honored the best players of the first 100 years of the National Football League NFL The team was chosen by a panel of 26 voters made up of coaches team and front office executives former players and members of the media between April and June 2018 Players were selected at each position group and were voted in no order There will be 10 quarterbacks 12 running backs 10 wide receivers 5 tight ends 7 tackles 7 guards 4 centers 7 defensive ends 7 defensive tackles 6 outside linebackers 6 middle inside linebackers 7 cornerbacks 6 safeties 2 kickers 2 punters 2 kick punt returners and 10 coaches Sources 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 Position Player Team s played for AccoladesRB Jim Brown Cleveland Browns 1957 1965 Hall of Fame 1971 NFL 75th Anniversary All Time Team NFL 1960s All Decade Team NFL Rookie of the Year 1957 3 AP NFL Most Valuable Player 1957 1958 1965 8 First team All Pro 1957 1961 1963 1965 9 Pro Bowler 1957 1965 NFL champion 1964 WR Marvin Harrison Indianapolis Colts 1996 2008 Hall of Fame 2016 NFL 2000s All Decade Team 3 First team All Pro 1999 2002 2006 8 Pro Bowler 1999 2006 Super Bowl champion XLI TE John Mackey Baltimore Colts 1963 1971 San Diego Chargers 1972 Hall of Fame 1992 NFL 1960s All Decade Team 3 First team All Pro 1966 1968 4 Pro Bowler 1963 1966 1968 NFL champion 1968 Super Bowl champion V Bold Unanimous selection 148 151 154 156 NFL All Decade Teams Edit Main article National Football League All Decade Teams nbsp nbsp Tom Coughlin in the White House after winning a Super Bowl with the New York Giants nbsp Chandler JonesNFL All Decade Teams Name Team Pos DecadeJim Brown Cleveland Browns RB 1960sJohn Mackey Baltimore Colts TE 1960sJim Ringo Green Bay PackersPhiladelphia Eagles C 1960sWalt Sweeney San Diego Chargers G AFL All TimeArt Monk Washington Redskins WR 1980sGary Anderson Pittsburgh Steelers K 1980sGary Anderson Pittsburgh SteelersMinnesota Vikings K 1990sDwight Freeney Indianapolis Colts DE 2000sMarvin Harrison Indianapolis Colts WR 2000sChandler Jones New England PatriotsArizona Cardinals EDGE 2010sNFL Individual Awards Edit See also List of National Football League awards NFL MVP Name Team Pos YearJim Brown Cleveland Browns RB 1957 1958 1963 1965NFL Super Bowl MVP Name Team Pos YearLarry Csonka Miami Dolphins HB 1974AFL MVP Name Team Pos YearJim Nance New England Patriots RB 1966NFC Player of the Year Name Team Pos YearDonovan McNabb Philadelphia Eagles QB 2000Jim Brown Award Name Team Pos YearJim Brown Cleveland Browns RB 1957 61 1963 65Floyd Little Denver Broncos RB 1971Deacon Jones Award Name Team Pos YearDwight Freeney Indianapolis Colts DE 2004Chandler Jones Arizona Cardinals EDGE 2017NFL Comeback Player of the Year Name Team Pos YearLarry Csonka Miami Dolphins HB 1979NFL Rookie of the Year Award Name Team Pos YearJim Brown Cleveland Browns RB 1957Golden Toe Award Name Team Pos YearGary Anderson Minnesota Vikings K 1998NFL GM Executive of the Year Name Team Pos YearAl Davis Las Vegas Raiders GM Owner 1976 2002 157 Scott Pioli New England Patriots GM 2003 2004 2007Scott Pioli Kansas City Chiefs GM 2010 nbsp All Decade 2000s NFL Executive Scott PioliNFL GM Executive of the Decade Name Team Pos YearScott Pioli Patriots Chiefs GM 2000sCoach of the Year Name Team Pos YearAl Davis Las Vegas Raiders HC 1963Tom Coughlin Jacksonville Jaguars HC 1996All Pro and Pro Bowls Edit See also All Pro and Pro Bowl Orange in the Pro Bowls and as All Pro Name Team Pos Pro Bowl All ProJim Ringo Green Bay PackersPhiladelphia Eagles C 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1967 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1966Jim Brown Cleveland Browns RB 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965Walt Sweeney San Diego Chargers G 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1970 1971 1972 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971Marvin Harrison Indianapolis Colts WR 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006Dwight Freeney Indianapolis Colts DE 2003 2004 2005 2008 2009 2010 2011 2003 2004 2005 2009Larry Csonka Miami Dolphins FB 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1971 1972 1973Floyd Little Denver Broncos RB 1968 1969 1970 1971 1973 1969 1970 1971John Mackey Baltimore Colts TE 1963 1965 1966 1967 1968 1966 1967 1968Donovan McNabb Philadelphia Eagles QB 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2009Gary Anderson Pittsburgh SteelersMinnesota Vikings K 1983 1985 1993 1998 1983 1985 1998Chandler Jones New England PatriotsArizona Cardinals DE 2015 2017 2019 2021 2017 2019Art Monk Washington Redskins WR 1984 1985 1986 1984 1985Keith Bulluck Tennessee Titans LB 2003 2004 2002 2003 2004Jim Nance New England Patriots FB 1966 1967 1966 1967 1969Daryl Johnston Dallas Cowboys FB 1993 1994 1993 1994Rob Moore New York JetsArizona Cardinals WR 1994 1997 1997Joe Morris New York Giants RB 1985 1986 1986Stan Walters Philadelphia Eagles T 1978 1979 1979Jim Collins Los Angeles Rams LB 1984 1985 1984 1985Al Bemiller Buffalo Bills C 1965Rob Burnett Cleveland Browns DE 1994 2000Olindo Mare Miami Dolphins K 1999 1999Tom Myers New Orleans Saints DB 1979 1979David Tyree New York Giants WR 2005 2005Otis Wilson Chicago Bears LB 1985 1984 1985Joe Ehrmann Baltimore Colts DT 1975 1976Doc Alexander Rochester Jeffersons C 1921 1922Jack McBride New York Giants FB 1925Jim Ridlon Dallas Cowboys DB 1964Facilities EditArchbold Stadium Edit nbsp Archbold Stadium seating stands in 1914 nbsp Archbold Stadium arch entrance 1922 Main article Archbold Stadium Upon its completion in 1907 Archbold Stadium was touted as the Greatest Athletic Arena in America Designed to resemble the Roman Coliseum and to never become outdated Archbold Stadium was a trademark of Syracuse Orange football 158 The stadium was named for John D Archbold who donated 600 000 for the project The Orange battled for victory inside the walls of Archbold Stadium from 1907 until 1978 Orange fans of the early 1900s were astonished by Archbold s unique design The stadium s front entrance defined the character of Archbold which consisted of an impressive cement arch and two epic towers which extended high above the archway In addition to providing the University and the fans with an aesthetically beautiful stadium Archbold gave the Orange football team a distinct home field advantage for all 71 years of its existence The Orange went 265 112 20 all time at Archbold and at times were nearly unbeatable From 1915 to 1927 Syracuse achieved a remarkable home record of 61 10 6 Then during the 11 year stretch from 1958 to 1968 the team in Orange won 47 and lost only 6 games played at Archbold Stadium 158 Toward the end of the 1970s Syracuse University was under pressure to improve its football facilities in order to remain a Division I A football school Archbold Stadium could not be expanded earlier in the decade it had been reduced from 40 000 seats to 26 000 due to fire codes Therefore Syracuse University decided to build a new stadium on the site of Archbold which appropriately for Syracuse s often cold weather was to have a domed Teflon coated fiberglass inflatable roof While the JMA Wireless Dome was being built during the 1979 season Syracuse played home games at three different locations Giants Stadium home of the NFL s New York Giants Rich Stadium now known as New Era Field home of the NFL s Buffalo Bills and Schoellkopf Field home of the Cornell Big Red The JMA Wireless Dome Edit Main article JMA Wireless Dome nbsp The JMA Dome 2021 The Syracuse Orange football team plays their games at the JMA Wireless Dome referred to as the JMA Dome The stadium is also known as The Loud House when it opened in September 1980 it was made clear just how loud it was inside soon famous nickname was coined It is the largest domed stadium of any college campus and the largest domed stadium in the Northeastern United States The JMA Wireless Dome is used for several sports at the university and seats 49 250 for football 1 The field was dedicated in 2009 to Ernie Davis the first African American Heisman Trophy winner The field now reads Ernie Davis Legends Field between the 45 yard lines on the home side Davis s number forty four was also placed along that yard line The dedication took place at the Syracuse vs West Virginia game October 10 2009 159 In May 2018 the university announced the first phase of a major renovation to the JMA Wireless Dome as the central portion of a larger campus update The most significant changes were the replacement of the current air supported roof with a fixed roof two thirds of which will be translucent the installation of air conditioning and the largest centerhung videoboard in college sports 160 The upgrade also included a new lighting and sound systems Wi Fi improvements accessibility upgrades improved restrooms and new concession spaces 161 The high profile renovation project by Geiger Engineers the same firm that was the structural engineer for the original stadium was named a winner of NCSEA s 2021 Excellence in Structural Engineering Award for Forensic Renovation Retrofit Rehabilitation Structures 162 The school announced the next phase of its work to enhance elevate and expand the stadium experience in April 2022 This includes a complete replacement of benches with individual seats a construction of a new publicly accessible event facility adjacent to the Dome and an upgrade of the entire digital infrastructure including latest 5G technology and wireless connectivity 163 The renovation of both phases estimated to cost 165 million is expected to be completed in 2024 Future scheduled opponents EditAnnounced schedules as of February 7 2020 164 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037Colgate Ohio vs Tennessee in Atlanta GA New Hampshire at Penn State Penn State Morgan State at Notre Dame Notre DameWestern Michigan at Army UConn at Army Notre Dameat Purdue Holy Cross Army UConnArmy vs UConn at Notre Dame at Notre Dame UConnReferences Edit a b History of the Carrier Dome Cuse com September 29 2008 Retrieved April 28 2020 SYRACUSE ALL AMERICA SELECTIONS cuse com September 20 2018 Retrieved Nov 24 2018 Color Palette Syracuse University Brand Guidelines PDF Retrieved December 19 2022 Syracuse University JMA Wireless Announce Naming Rights Partnership Usher in the JMA Wireless Dome Era Syracuse University News 2022 05 19 Retrieved 2022 05 19 Syracuse Football History Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 11 29 Inductees Football Players amp Coaches College Football Hall of Fame www cfbhall com Retrieved 2018 11 29 Hall of Famers by College Hall of Famers Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site www profootballhof com Retrieved 2018 11 29 Alandt Anthony 2 November 2022 The storied history of Syracuse football began well before its 1889 loss to Rochester The Daily Orange Retrieved 18 December 2022 Robert J Reid 3 October 2005 A Memorable Season in College Football A Look Back at 1959 p 95 ISBN 9781452040332 Retrieved March 24 2017 John Barsha 78 Lawyer Football All America in 1918 February 21 1976 via NYTimes com Glickman Marty 1996 The Fastest Kid on the Block The Marty Glickman Story Syracuse University of Syacuse Press Wilmeth Sidat Singh www orangehoops org Retrieved 2018 11 29 Walker Rhiannon 2013 12 14 Amending a Wrong Stories Beneath the Shell Syracuse University Athletics The History of Syracuse Football Suathletics com November 12 2005 Retrieved March 24 2017 1953 Orange Bowl Alabama vs Syracuse Saturdaydownsouth com January 1 1953 Retrieved March 24 2017 Syracuse University Athletics 1957 Cotton Bowl Cuse com Retrieved March 24 2017 1959 Orange Bowl Oklahoma v Syracuse OUDaily com Home OUDaily com December 23 2014 Retrieved March 24 2017 Vecsey George 30 April 2013 Jim Brown Still a Hometown Hero The New York Times Hometown Hall of Famers Plaque Honors Jim Brown in Manhasset N Y Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site Joe Montana Jim Brown on Hall of Fame 50th Anniversary Team NFL com July 29 2013 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved February 21 2017 The Cotton Bowl 1957 Mmbolding com Archived from the original on June 8 2011 Retrieved December 18 2010 ESPN Classic Davis won Heisman respect Espn com Retrieved March 24 2017 Syracuse football legend Floyd Little will leave in June Syracuse com 12 May 2016 Retrieved March 24 2017 The Official Website of Larry Csonka Football Years Larrycsonka com Retrieved March 24 2017 Mcg Robert April 29 1993 Ben Schwartzwalder Dies at 83 Revitalized Football at Syracuse The New York Times Retrieved March 24 2017 Ben Schwartzwalder Coaching Record College Football at Sports reference com January 1 1970 Retrieved March 24 2017 Eagan Matt 22 October 2006 Syracuse Lauds Athletes Who Boycotted In 1970 Hartford Courant pp A1 A6 Retrieved 19 January 2021 via Newspapers com nbsp Nelson Manfred Blake October 1969 Novelists America Fiction as History 1910 1940 The American Historical Review Syracuse N Y Syracuse University Press xiii 279 6 95 doi 10 1086 ahr 75 1 228 ISSN 1937 5239 Maloney Michigan Aide Syracuse Football Coach The New York Times The New York Times August 9 2018 Archived from the original on August 9 2018 Former Syracuse football coaches had their own memorable speeches Syracuse com 20 October 2016 Retrieved March 24 2017 a b Stefan Robert March 27 2013 A History of Archbold Stadium Syrguide com Retrieved March 24 2017 Art Monk Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site Profootballhof com December 5 1957 Retrieved March 24 2017 Alfano Peter October 12 1987 At 5 0 Syracuse Football Is Back in the Game The New York Times Retrieved March 24 2017 The Cornell Daily Sun 25 November 1980 The Cornell Daily Sun Cdsun library cornell edu November 25 1980 Retrieved March 24 2017 MacPherson Is Hired By the Patriots The New York Times January 8 1991 Retrieved March 24 2017 Sports Report Syracuse University Magazine Sumagazine syr edu Retrieved March 24 2017 1987 Syracuse Orange Schedule and Results College Football at Sports reference com 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Recap November 26 2016 ESPN November 26 2016 Retrieved March 24 2017 Kalland Robby November 26 2016 The five best stats from Pittsburgh and Syracuse s record breaking point total CBSSports com Retrieved March 24 2017 2016 Syracuse Orange Schedule and Results College Football at Sports reference com January 1 1970 Retrieved March 24 2017 Clemson vs Syracuse Game Recap October 13 2017 ESPN ESPN com 2017 Syracuse Orange Schedule and Results College Football at Sports Reference com 2018 Football Schedule Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2023 07 18 Mink Nate 2022 11 27 SU runs off 26 unanswered points in 32 23 win at BC snapping long losing streak final score recap syracuse Retrieved 2023 07 18 Mink Nate 2022 12 29 SU falls to Minnesota 28 20 in Pinstripe Bowl final score recap syracuse Retrieved 2023 07 18 2018 Quick Facts Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 11 29 2017 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records PDF Indianapolis The National Collegiate Athletic Association July 2017 p 113 Retrieved October 31 2019 Remember What It Took to Get Here 11 April 2016 2019 Syracuse Football Media Guide PDF cuse com Syracuse Athletics p 154 Retrieved October 31 2019 Syracuse Orange Coaches College Football at Sports Reference com Offensive Individual Career Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 11 25 Barall Andy Jim Brown Should Be No 1 but What About Most Underrated The Fifth Down Retrieved 2018 11 25 TSN Presents Football s 100 Greatest Players 2008 09 16 Archived from the original on 2008 09 16 Retrieved 2018 11 25 Myers Gary NFL Top 50 Jim Brown is best player in league history edges Giants Lawrence Taylor in Daily News rankings Nos 1 10 NY Daily News nydailynews com Retrieved 2018 11 25 Gallagher Robert C Ernie Davis The Elmira Express the Story of a Heisman Trophy Winner Bartleby Press 1999 Eugene Register Guard Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved 2018 11 25 Eugene Register Guard Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved 2018 11 25 SU Athletics The Express to Film Scenes on Campus Next Week Extras Needed 2008 01 07 Archived from the original on 2008 01 07 Retrieved 2018 11 25 a b The Legend of 44 Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 11 25 Floyd Little Stats Pro Football Reference com Pro Football Reference com Retrieved 2018 11 25 DiDomenico Tammy 2000 Strike up the band surface syr edu DiDomenico Tammy Strike up the band surface syr edu Great SU Rivalries amp No 124 Syracuse University The Original Orange Originalorange syr edu Archived from the original on March 27 2017 Retrieved March 24 2017 NCAAF Football Series records Syracuse vs Boston College Mcubed net Retrieved March 24 2017 Winsipedia Syracuse Orange vs Boston College Eagles football series history Winsipedia Retrieved 2018 12 07 Winsipedia Syracuse Orange vs Pittsburgh Panthers football series history Winsipedia West Virginia Mountaineers to join Big 12 in July after Big East lawsuit settlement Espn com February 15 2012 Retrieved March 24 2017 Syracuse West Virginia Fans Create Petition For The Ben Schwartzwalder Trophy The Spun December 10 2012 Retrieved March 24 2017 Syracuse WVU record winsipedia com December 31 2018 Retrieved December 31 2018 Syracuse record against WVU winsipedia com December 31 2018 Retrieved December 31 2018 Winsipedia Syracuse Orange vs West Virginia Mountaineers football series history Winsipedia Daughters Amy The Most Unbreakable Records in College Football Bleacher Report Retrieved 2019 07 28 Winsipedia Syracuse Orange vs Penn State Nittany Lions football series history Winsipedia Berkes Peter 2013 08 31 Penn State outlasts Syracuse 23 17 SBNation com Retrieved 2019 07 28 Syracuse wallops Colgate in renewal of rivalry Observer Dispatch September 26 2010 Retrieved August 13 2014 Syracuse renewing Colgate rivalry Times Union September 25 2010 Retrieved August 13 2014 Syracuse Football Colgate Breaking Out The Hoodoo In 2016 nunesmagician com April 8 2014 Retrieved August 13 2014 Colors Syracuse University www syracuse edu Retrieved 2018 12 08 January 09 Posted January 09 2017 at 12 48 PM Updated PM 2017 at 12 48 9 January 2017 Ranking the 12 best Syracuse football uniforms through the years syracuse com Retrieved 2018 12 08 Bierman Brad 2015 06 16 Orange Watch Syracuse football uniforms had long colorful history before Nike The Juice Online Retrieved 2018 12 08 Syracuse Orange AP Poll History College Football at Sports Reference com College Football at Sports Reference com Retrieved 2018 11 29 Syracuse to Retire Joe Morris No 47 Jersey Syracuse University Athletics Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 12 01 The 150 greatest players in college football s 150 year history ESPN com 2020 01 14 Retrieved 2020 03 15 Jim Brown Named Greatest College Football Player by ESPN Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2020 03 15 1990 All Decade Team Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 11 29 Orange in the College Football Hall of Fame Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 11 23 Pro Football Hall of Fame Members Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 11 23 a b NFL s All Time Team Tom Brady Joe Montana top quarterbacks NFL com Archived from the original on 2019 12 28 Retrieved 2022 03 08 Joe Montana first quarterback named to All Time Team NFL com Retrieved 2022 12 19 Patriots QB Tom Brady named to NFL All Time Team NFL com Retrieved 2022 12 19 a b Battista Judy November 22 2019 NFL s All Time Team Jim Brown tops RBs Bill Belichick a coach NFL com Retrieved November 23 2019 OFFICIAL ALL TIME TEAM ROSTER NFL com Retrieved 25 November 2019 Bergman Jeremy Tony Gonzalez first TE named to NFL 100 All Time Team NFL com Retrieved 13 December 2019 a b NFL s All Time Team Tight ends offensive linemen revealed NFL com Archived from the original on 2019 12 14 Retrieved 2020 03 15 Randy Moss first WR named to NFL 100 All Time Team NFL com Retrieved 2022 12 19 a b NFL s All Time Team Jerry Rice headlines wide receivers NFL com Retrieved 2022 12 19 Awards database pro football reference a b The Legend of Archbold Stadium Syracuse University Athletics Retrieved 2018 12 07 Syracuse University Athletics Introducing Ernie Davis Legends Field at the Carrier Dome Suathletics com September 12 2008 Retrieved August 31 2013 Events UKi Media amp 2020 10 01 Syracuse University installs largest centerhung videoboard in college sports Stadia Magazine Retrieved 2020 12 22 syracuse com 14 May 2018 Syracuse s 118 million Carrier Dome renovations to include new roof air conditioning syracuse com Retrieved 2018 12 13 JMA Wireless Dome formerly Carrier Dome at Syracuse University Geiger Engineers www geigerengineers com Retrieved 2022 05 25 Syracuse University to Rename On Campus Stadium Readies Next Phase of Transformation Syracuse University News 2022 04 20 Retrieved 2022 05 25 Syracuse Orange Football Future Schedules FBSchedules com Retrieved February 7 2020 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Syracuse Orange football Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syracuse Orange football amp oldid 1177820921, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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